Word: suited
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Methodist hymnal has tended to reduce its Wesleyan content. Reversing the trend, the 1966 edition includes 81 hymns by John and Charles Wesley, 20 more than the 1935 version contained. Also included is a nostalgic fundamentalist favorite that was left out of the previous hymnal because it did not suit the musical palate of the time: The Old Rugged Cross. All in all, proudly sums up the Rev. Nolan B. Harmon, retired Bishop of Western North Carolina and one of the supervising editors, "it's the greatest hymnal we've ever...
...Susan Stearly has run into none of the dangers predicted by doubters. There has been no hint of a malpractice suit, which some doctors feared such nurses could get embroiled in. And the local physicians, who might have muttered about leaving doctoring to doctors, have welcomed the much-needed help. By last week two more of Dr. Silver's nurse-practitioners had set up a similar operation in a housing project in Denver. Another graduate has joined Nurse Stearly in Trinidad, where townspeople are beginning to recognize the long, athletic stride of their first nurse-practitioner...
...Tillinghast about his Boeing purchases-he argued that other planes should have been bought-Hughes threatened to sue the airline for ignoring his wishes. Instead, backed by Breech and his star-filled board, Tillinghast sued Hughes for $145 million treble damages on antitrust charges. While he had control, the suit charged, Hughes had forced the company to buy planes that did not fit its needs, notably 20 Super-Constellations. TWA wrote the Connies off its books as a $38 million loss after flying them only a year and a half. Hughes countersued, but when his penchant for privacy kept...
This spring, Hughes stunned everybody by cashing in his chips-all 6,584,937 shares of TWA, for $546 million, six times his original $90 million investment. Still, Tillinghast has insisted that the suit against Hughes remain alive. "It's a corporate asset," says TWA's General Counsel Melvin Milligan...
...market to which users turn when regular sources fail. In April, Chile, unable to resist temptation, broke a producers' agreement that had pegged the price at 42? a lb., went up to 62?. Zambia then decided to sell at L.M.E. prices, now 72?, and Peru-based companies followed suit. Last week Chile again hiked its price, this time to 70?. In the U.S., the Administration has held the price at 36? by a combination of presidential arm-twisting, massive releases from Government stockpiles, subsidies to mining companies, and a virtual ban on exports...