Word: surely
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...House Republicans are against it. Says Wisconsin's John Byrnes, the senior Republican on Mills's committee: "This is a lot of malarkey about Mills's holding up this bill. It isn't the committee or the Congress. It's the people." To be sure, the Gallup poll reports that the public opposes higher taxes, but nothing could be less surprising. Nonetheless, there has been no organized general protest against the tax-there has rarely been a protest to any increase since World...
...carriers, electronics and office-equipment firms. Some of them quadrupled and quintupled in price within a few months. Now most of them have calmed down, and new vogues may be beginning. But how is the individual investor to know what those vogues will be? Though there is no sure answer, most people find that it pays to shop around for a sympathetic and knowing broker. At the very least, he can be expected to know what other brokers are buying and selling...
...will gasp and crumple in agony," said the ads for Luther, "and the Christian world will split. Tonight. In your living room." Now who could afford to miss that? And just to make sure that no one did, the ABC cameras zeroed in for so many closeups that it seemed as though the lenses were affixed to the actors' noses. But that was all right, for the furrowed brow and blazing eye said a lot. Filmed in London, the adaptation of John Osborne's play about Martin Luther's supposed psychological dilemmas glinted with bright character roles...
...suburbs when the children arrive, shift from suburb to suburb as income rises, and then move back into the city after the children are grown-decorating and redecorating all along the way. Let there be a divorce, and the master bedroom, if not the whole house, is sure to be redone by the remaining partner. And even without such upheavals, Americans think of change as a form of therapy. "People can afford to be bored," says Dallas Decorator Howard Goldman. "They can now tire of things they couldn't afford to tire of in less affluent times...
...sure, Toll probably has a bigger problem than most campus presidents. At a hearing of the committee-convened in the wake of the predawn arrest at Stony Brook last month of 38 people who were charged with sale or possession of drugs-he admitted that perhaps 20% of his 5,200 students have used drugs, mostly marijuana. Toll assured the committee that "we cannot tolerate illegal activities," warned that students involved in the arrests can expect expulsion...