Word: without
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Dates: during 1960-1960
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...reelection, the press corps flew in the same plane, mixed in easy camaraderie with a Nixon who regularly emerged, sometimes in pajamas, for bantering strolls down the aisle. Background conferences were common; at them the Vice President frequently confided headline-making information that the newsmen could use without identifying the source...
...rear. "Nixon's people seem to feel the reporters are a conspiratorial group," says the Baltimore Sun's Phil Potter. Nixon's press secretary, Herbert G. Klein, denying that there is any real hostility, admits that "you don't talk to the press people without some regard to what you say," and some members of Nixon's staff think hostile reporters go over every line of Nixon's speeches looking for examples of the "old Nixon...
...garrulous vagabond named Rocky Nelson, 35. In his 16-season baseball career, Nelson had played for six big-league teams and been consigned to the minors five times before finally catching on with Pittsburgh, where he was revered for the art of chewing tobacco for a full hour without spitting. Against Yankee Bob Turley (who neither smokes nor chews), Nelson drove a two-run homer over the rightfield wall and the Pirates...
Seven autumns and scores of lawsuits after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled school segregation unconstitutional, the Southern Education Reporting Service last week issued a mixed progress report. For the first time, in fall 1960, the South opened its public schools without a shred of violence-not a single riot or bombing disturbed the peace. But not one Negro child as yet attends class with whites in Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina or Louisiana.* And out of 3,095,345 Negro pupils in all Southern public schools, only 183,104 attend integrated classes in 1960. Compared to last year, the gain...
Under the French protectorate (1912-56), the once proud university sank even lower as a kind of Moslem Kaffeeklatsch, without exams or degrees, a place of courtyard classrooms where masters and disciples swatted at fusty theological disputes. Students lived in airless cubicles, three to one windowless room, sleeping on the floor and cooking on charcoal burners...