Word: supportively
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...nearly 48 hours after Lindsay's veto, the impasse persisted, and 20,000 more tons of garbage piled up in the city's streets. While Lindsay enjoyed considerable moral support for his stand, the city's three major daily papers attacked Rockefeller. Even the New York Times, normally a Rockefeller supporter, flayed the Governor in uncharacteristically harsh terms, indicting him for "sabotage," "appeasement," "bad politics and bad government...
...Behind the few new programs were drastic cuts in old ones. College-level construction money was slashed from last year's $450 million to $75 million, and library funds were cut from $104 million to $46 million. Government-sponsored scholarships-which last year financed 105,000 freshmen-will support only 63,000 in the coming year...
...reason to support" and "a Republican prospect that is in every respect worse." Concluded Galbraith: "If the Democrats seem to be lacking in credibility, the Republicans produce a man you can really mistrust?Richard Nixon." At week's end the A.D.A. national board voted, 65 to 47, to endorse McCarthy's candidacy?with an amendment, introduced by Chairman Galbraith, recognizing that individual members are free to support other candidates. Whether this halfhearted compromise will prevent an irreparable split is questionable. One obvious apostate was former Chairman John Roche, President Johnson's house intellectual, who immediately said he would resign from...
...began a six-month tour in Kansas City, Mo., last week garbed in gaudy green, yellow, blue and red shirts, some with socks to match. "Color is good and correct for tennis," insists Dixon. "In fact, today white looks washed out and bush league." Surprisingly, the argument is gaining support, even in traditional circles. Says Walter Elcock, president of Brookline's Longwood Cricket Club, where players have worn only whites since 1877: "So many changes are being made in tennis, I can't see that a few more will hurt the game. I might even try a colored...
...fill. "These kids don't appreciate the fact that it takes time to develop craft," he says. "They want all the answers right away. I went prepared to be angry or sympathetic toward them. I came away rather sad." The conference had been supported in part by the Washington Post and Newsweek, which together had contributed $15,000. Whether the USSPA will find it easy to get sponsors for next year's gathering is problematical. After a considerably tamer conference in 1966, both the Overseas Press Club and the Reader's Digest withdrew their support...