Word: sharing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...more to finance the upcoming campaigns. It could well be worth the price. With the civil rights issue still percolating in the South, and John Kennedy's charismatic control over the big-city Democrats gone from the North, Republicans figure 1964 might be ripe for winning a hefty share of the 435 House seats and 35 Senate seats that come up in November...
...titular sovereignty" over the Zone. But that satisfied neither Panama nor oldline U.S. residents, who feared that it would undercut their privileged position. Chiari has not yet spelled out his precise demands. But he surely will ask for greater control over the Zone and a vastly increased share of the revenues-he once mentioned $10 million a year...
...when you travel with your children than when you travel alone. Children have a way of making friends unselfconsciously both for themselves and for you. . . . People everywhere go out of their way to be helpful and kind to families with children." Traveling together also produces the treasure of the shared experience. And for those experiences you don't want to share with the small fry, Mother Hadley waxes ecstatic over Europe's part-time-child-care facilities. "Accustomed to baby sitters who spend more time watching television than the children, it is one of the small joys...
...fact is that some white people do not care enough about the desire of black Americans to cast away the oppressive and degrading shackles that have been their share in American life. Such people-and they are powerful at all levels of American life-devote their time to stamping out any legitimate efforts by black people to better their lot. And the big club with which they smash all such worthy endeavors is always the same: frantic charges of "reverse racism," "black supremacy," and "black paranoia." Staunch members of our Association will not be bothered a tiny...
...their glamour and hustle, short lines will go on being short. Their less than 2% share of total rail revenues last year was a tiny tweet amid the mighty roar of the main lines. Mergers, of course, still take place. The Lehigh & Susquehanna disappeared last year into the Reading, and the Mohoning & Shenango into the New York Central. But one thing is certain: in 1964, the nation's short lines are too various, too scattered-and too content with their tiny place in the sun-for another Pennsy or Central ever to emerge from them...