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Word: cheeringly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...looked tan and relaxed; apparently he enjoyed himself although he did not express much emotion. Kennedy stood up to cheer only once as the teams moved up and down the field, scoring only three points apiece. Most of the time the President smoked a small cigar, chewed on his sunglasses, and chatted with aides Dave Powers and Larry O'Brien...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Kennedy and Harvard: A Complicated Tie | 11/26/1963 | See Source »

...reason for all this preholiday cheer was a set of figures that could conservatively be described as phenomenal. The company's net income for July, August and September was 97% higher -let's have that one again-97% higher-than it was for the same period last year. It took in about $4,500,000 in the summer of 1962 and more than $9,000,000 this year. And for 1963 as a whole, CBS has already earned more than $28 million on sales of $395 million. At this time last year, it was just riching alone with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Gold in the Air | 11/22/1963 | See Source »

...minutes left in the game, a frustrated Eastern tackle, thinking he had been pushed by a St. John's player, went almost berserk and had to be restrained by three teammates There was fighting on the field for the rest of the game while St. John's cheer-leaders cried out "Back to Africa." As the game ended, several hundred Eastern fans rushed across the field and up into the St. John's section. Perhaps they meant to start a fight, or perhaps they did not. In any case, pushing matches started at the exits, and a full-scale race...

Author: By Douald E. Graham, | Title: Congress, Not Negro, Blamed for DC 'Mess' | 11/8/1963 | See Source »

...France, since the Shah first met his young Queen-to-be while she was an architecture student in Paris. Through flag-bedecked streets rode De Gaulle in a gilded state carriage. Along the route, crowds chanted "Zindehbad [long live] De Gaulle," which turned out to be a particularly poetic cheer, since the visitor's name sounds like "Two Flowers" in Farsi, the Persian tongue. Ignoring Draconian security measures, Two Flowers moved right into the crowd and shook hundreds of outstretched hands just as if he were at home. He toured the ancient cities of Shiraz, Isfahan and Persepolis, viewed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Iran: Charles at the Peacock Throne | 10/25/1963 | See Source »

...four lines are now in good shape, and of the four none has greater reason to cheer than TWA. After losing $20 million in two years, the line has climbed back into the black, and this year expects to earn $10 million or more. President Tillinghast, 52, is so confident of TWA's good health that last week he broke off the merger agreement made with Pan American last December, when TWA's plight was still perilous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: U.S. Business: Back in the Black | 10/25/1963 | See Source »

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