Word: weatherly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Soviet postwar relations have gone through cycles of freeze and mild thaw-but the Kennedy Administration has experienced mainly cold weather. When Kennedy first took office, he naively conveyed a request for a six-month moratorium on Communist crisis stirring while his Administration got its house in order...
...sorghum was intended to cut feed grain production heavily at a cost of about $500 million. Secretary Freeman maintains that the cut amounted to 800 million bushels as planned, but the program's cost-$768 million-suggests that efficient farmers were able, with the help of unusually good weather, to grow far more than the Government expected. The feed grain carryover dropped for the first time in a decade, but many farm experts claim that the Government paid more for that milestone than it would have paid by buying the surplus grain...
...Variables. Shelter debate is almost meaningless, of course, unless tied to a clear set of premises about the character of a nuclear attack. The effectiveness of shelters would depend on the pattern of attack, the size of the bombs, their accuracy, the height of the explosion, weather conditions, and several other variables, all subject to change as U.S. and Soviet technology moves...
...been fretting about his game ever since the winter tour began. He failed to survive the cut in the Los Angeles Open, was out of the money in the San Diego Open, debated quitting the tour before the Bing Crosby tournament. But to Ford, the rugged courses and trying weather (rain, sleet, snow, hail, 40-m.p.h. winds) of California's Monterey Peninsula proved peculiarly hospitable. On the first hole of a sudden-death playoff with chunky Joe Campbell, Ford collected the winner's purse...
...Force (1957-58), will become president and next in command to "C.R.," who is a vigorous 62. Eastern's pioneering chairman, Eddie Rickenbacker, 71, who lately has been more active on the banquet circuit than in the board room, will probably fold his wings. And somewhere, keeping a weather eye on the finances, will be Laurance Rockefeller, 51, who, as Eastern's biggest shareholder (with 94,000 of the 3,235,000 shares), was the driving force behind the merger. Rockefeller will also be the biggest shareholder in the merged company...