Word: bore
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...budget for 1967," said the President, "bears the strong imprint of the troubled world we live in." The figures presented to Congress this week bore him out. The Federal Government's 1966-67 administrative budget totals a record $112.8 billion, $6.4 billion more than the expected spending for the current fiscal year...
...morning after his death, Premier Kosygin and President Ayub Khan shouldered Shastri's coffin and bore it to a blue-and-silver Soviet Aeroflot IL-18 airliner for the 3½-hour flight to a mourning New Delhi and reunion with Shastri's grief-stricken family. As Indian generals carried the flag-covered body into his home at 10 Janpath (People's Way), Shastri's wife Lalita threw herself on her dead husband and kissed his face. "Shastriji, you have left me alone!" she wailed...
...manufacturer, "for the control of nausea and vomiting of pregnancy," as well as for motion sickness. Cyclizine (Burroughs Wellcome's Marezine) is widely prescribed for pregnant women, though the company does not specifically recommend it for them. European doctors said that some women who took the pills later bore malformed babies. Last January, Dr. Sadusk agreed that pregnant women should not take these drugs, then promptly reversed himself. Not until October did he approve a label warning: "Not for use by women who are pregnant or who may possibly become pregnant"-even though he is not convinced that they...
...question about who would win, because all the big stars-Wilt Chamberlain, Bill Russell, Oscar Robertson-were on one side. The East had already won the game three years in a row, and had no trouble making it four straight, 137-94. But if the game itself was a bore, the game within the game was fascinating because, for the first time, N.B.A. officials had decided to give something of value to the night's most valuable player: a $5,000 Ford 7-Litre convertible...
Johnson was convinced he could carry the American people with him, whatever sacrifice Viet Nam might require -and public-opinion polls bore him out. Still, the pressures from home and abroad mounted with the very lack of successful contacts with the enemy-and, above all, as the U.S. commitment of men began to burgeon. The confusion was unnecessary, but it was undeniably true that leaders both in the U.S. and in foreign lands had begun to lose sight of precisely what the U.S. wanted in Viet Nam, and why America was there. The peace offensive contained the answer...