Word: impactions
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...Abiding Impact. Still to come were many, many things: a moonlight stroll through the parks of the Taj Mahal, lunch at the lovely Lake Palace in Udaipur, a visit to the burning ghats of Benares. Then, this week, on to Pakistan, supper with the Wali of Swat, a drive up to the fabled Khyber Pass...
...some Indians the visit had merely jogged remembrance of things thankfully past. Said President Prasad: "Our relationship with the United Kingdom is a part of our own history of the past 200 years. The British impact on India has in many ways been an abiding one." But now that they were free, many Indians were ready to acknowledge that the British may have ruled too tenaciously but not without fondness-and, at times, even rather well...
...public interest has not been seriously harmed by strikes in steel, or by steel collective bargaining agreements, despite common public opinion to the contrary." So said Harvard Professor E. Robert Livernash last week in a forthright, polemical, 317-page study of collective bargaining in the steel industry and its impact on the U.S. economy...
...record 116-day steel strike, must have come as some surprise to the Secretary. During that strike, he and the Labor Department, which published last week's report, issued warning bulletins on the strike's bad effects. But now the report's thesis that "the economic impact of strikes has been exaggerated" is soundly endorsed by Mitchell in a prefatory note: "Past steel strikes have left no permanent scars on the economy, have had minimal effects on wages and prices...
...anything makes a hatmaker's hair stand on end, it is a man who does not wear a hat-especially if he is the President of the U.S. Last week, fearing the national impact of John F. Kennedy's usual hatlessness, the hat industry set out to rescue the nation's impressionable young men (and itself) from the perils of bareheadedness. In an eye-catching, full-page ad in the New York Times appeared a huge portrait of a beatnik so snaggy-and hatless-that no rising young man could afford to look anything like...