Word: suffering
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Colorado and California, he stuck mainly to bipartisan subjects of interest in the West: conservation and reclamation, water and power, floods and dams. But he well knew that for a politician there is no such thing as a nonpolitical handshake -and that the folks beaming up at him would suffer no amnesia on election...
...Relatively few of those who try to take their own lives suffer from the crippling mental illnesses classed as psychoses. The only emotional disturbance common to nearly all of them is depression, with the danger greatest just when they seem to be recovering...
...British press-that eventually the U.S. will have no choice but to raise its gold price. The worldwide market crash has made securities less attractive and gold more so as a repository for spare capital. And not least important, once a man catches gold fever he is apt to suffer from it for the rest of his life...
...after supply and demand had come into equilibrium. The U.S. Government would maintain these "adjustment" supports for five years, then get out of the price-support business completely and permanently. For wheat and a few other oversupply crops, the cut in price would be so great that growers would suffer too drastic a drop in income; for these farmers. C.E.D. proposes temporary "income protection" subsidies, which would shrink year by year and come to an end altogether after five years...
...favor Britain's entry, thereby arousing labor union suspicions that they plan to trim British wages to Continental levels. Actually, those levels are rising.* More significantly. Common Market membership would shake up labor's soft and featherbedded ways. At present, British workers are immobile, hence many areas suffer from a severe labor shortage; plants will do anything-including slowing down production-to keep workers. British industry would have to take drastic steps to reorganize and re-equip. Many British businessmen agree that the "bracing cold shower." as Macmillan describes European competition, may flush inefficient firms right...