Word: wall
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...despite the broad rivalry between the two family dynasties it is a further paradox that McCormack must run as an anti-Kennedy candidate. The picture of the President that adorns the wall of his office suggests the similarities between the two men. Ideologically McCormack is a liberal with the Kennedy blend of soaring, egalitarian rhetoric and halting political pragmatism. Other pictures on the mantle show the candidate with Harry Truman and Pope John XXIII...
Business section makes its debut with a spot-news cover on the bulls and bears of Wall Street. The progress of the bull market has been portrayed on TIME'S cover five times previously, beginning with a baby bull in 1948. A baby bear-just a friendly cub-first turned up, sliding down a falling graph, in the background of a 1958 cover...
...eyes of the U.S. last week turned anxiously toward Wall Street, where drama and despair marked the stock market's worst week's plunge since June...
...miserable exile for the time when their mountain homeland would be free of Communist oppression. In the Middle East, a million Palestinian Arabs vegetated for the 14th year in camps and villages, still pawns in the irreconcilable conflict between the Arab states and Israel. In East Berlin, the Wall dammed up the flow of refugees, but men still tunneled beneath it, or leaped over it, or sought to blow it down...
...cemetery in the town of Albiano Magra (pop. 1,500), 60 miles southeast of Genoa, was filled to capacity, and in order to make space the town fathers ordered the construction of a large concrete wall with precut niches to fit average-length coffins. The Socialist-Communist city planners thought they solved the problem neatly, but when some coffins had to be shaved at both ends because their occupants were too long for their resting place, Christian Democrats angrily accused the Marxists of tampering with the dead "just as you trim the budget...