Word: shedding
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...need the can-do spirit of the American businessmen," the President told the group, which is headed by A.T. & T. Chairman Frederick Kappel and includes such prominent executives as Henry Ford II, Roger Blough and Ralph Cordiner. "So I ask you: banish your fears, shed your doubts, renew your hopes. We have much work...
...seeking election to Parliament in Scotland, Meriel Douglas-Home, 24, her two sisters and brother decided that they would renounce their courtesy titles (hers is Lady) because of "the love and favor and affection which they bear toward their parents." A few weeks before, Lord Home shed his own title to become just plain Sir Alec Douglas-Home, and that made the noble bit a little conspicuous for the children. Meriel took a proper commoner job as salesgirl at Bumpus, London's venerable bookshop. A photographer caught her melding into her new scenery during lunch hour, going shopping like...
...Many Germans share Adensuer's suspicion about the current round of agreements between the Americans and the Russians. Their reasons are obvious. West Germans now take American military support for granted and are used to having their own army. They are not too concerned about nuclear disarmament and have shed most of their feelings of guilt about World War II. They worry about only one thing: the question of reunification. To them, any move to agree with the Russians is a move to recognize East Germany. Erhard's intimacy with the United States creates the fear of abandoning "the other...
...nape of his neck. He dressed in modified swallowtail suits-a dignified black from October to May, a delicate grey from May to September. He was Texas' longtime Senator Tom Connally. He died last week in Washington at 86, and, recollecting his career, many a Washingtonian shed a tear for what he thought was a more pungent...
...being called Man, who, in some unassailable corner of his tarnished soul, yearns for, reflects, and presupposes a radiant otherness called God. Compared to Justice's rigorous goading of the individual conscience, such religiously oriented plays as Eliot's The Cocktail Party, Greene's The Potting Shed, MacLeish's J.B. and Chayevsky's Gideon seem like Communion services for the morally complacent...