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Word: slushing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...basis, he could now tell the Republican legislators just what they wanted to hear-and, in the process, get in some pretty good cracks at Democrat John Kennedy. Kennedy's fiscal policies, Rocky said, were "gutless." The President's public-works spending programs amounted to a political "slush fund." Like Kennedy, Rockefeller is for a tax cut-in fact, he argued for an immediate slash of $10 billion. But he also wanted drastic reductions in federal spending. Given these, he insisted, the U.S. could show a budget surplus in 1965 instead of the $12 billion deficit that Rocky...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Republicans: One Who Is | 4/19/1963 | See Source »

Crimson fans who trudged through ice and slush to witness the opening round of the E.C.A.C. tournament in Watson think last night were treated to some of the most horrendous hockey seen at Harvard in some time. The varsity skaters did manage to stop Colgate 5-3, but a more dismal winning performance would be hard to imagine...

Author: By Robert A. Ferguson, | Title: Varsity Six Topples Red Raiders, 5-3; Face Clarkson in E.C.A.C. Semifinals | 3/6/1963 | See Source »

...uninitiated Easterners the University of California at Berkeley usually glows with the promise of incessant sunshine and 17,000 tanned, wildly social collegiates. When compared to the slush of a Cambridge winter and the frequent dearth of "available" 'Cliffies, the Cal student does indeed lead a glamorous life. Yet it is the unfortunate plight of Berkeley students that intense social pressure deprives many of them of a full share of the advantages which are so glaringly available...

Author: By David M. Gordon, | Title: Univ. of California at Berkeley: Cliques and Student Alienation | 2/23/1963 | See Source »

Mona was wending her enigmatic way from Washington, via air-conditioned van, to Manhattan, where she went on view for 3½ weeks at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Despite rain, slush and bone-cracking cold, a crowd of 23,872 queued up in three-block-long lines on the first day to make frostbitten obeisance before the lady with the greenish face in her bulletproof, heat-and-humidity-controlled shrine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Show's the Thing | 2/15/1963 | See Source »

Overnight Case. Brussels, the scene of Britain's dashed hopes last week, is a dour, neon-lit old maid of a city. On Monday, the cobbled streets were slimy with black slush and blanketed with chilling fog as Britain's chief negotiator. Edward Heath, arrived with his aides. Minister for Commonwealth Affairs Duncan Sandys and Agriculture Minister Christopher Soames. The French, with a fine sense of economy, traveled light; only Luxembourg's four-man delegation was smaller. French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville brought only an overnight case, for he knew that he would...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Europe: A New & Obscure Destination | 2/8/1963 | See Source »

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