Word: ad
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Food and Drug Ad ministration has its way, many a bottle is going to disappear from drugstore and medicine-cabinet shelves in the next year or so. A few have been knocked off recently, but more will go now that FDA is invoking the power to reassess all the drugs that were approved from 1938 through early 1963, to see whether they measure up to the high standards set by the "thalidomide law." That law, officially the Drug Amendments Act, passed in 1962, contained a delay clause allowing previously approved drugs to stay on the market for two years without...
...least popular House, regardless of which Houses those are, are officially a well-guarded secret. The exact role and power of the Deans in assigning students has not been clear. And finally, Dean Elder has very kindly, but very persistently, refused to release the report of his ad hoc Faculty committee on the House admission system...
...Apparently Justice Arthur Goldberg [Feb. 21] wants to effect a quick redistribution of wealth by "Government compensation of victims of crime." What with muggings, hijackings, embezzlements, armed robbery, waterfront pilfering, and so on ad nauseam, this would cost the taxpayers tens of billions a year...
...office taboos -words that can't be printed and sights that can't be shown. The Chicago Daily News, a reasonable paper in other respects, used to paint out the nipples of male wrestlers and other shirtless athletes. The Atlanta Journal supplies shirts. Before passing an ad for the movie The Love Makers, in which Claudia Cardinale reposes on the chest of Jean-Paul Belmondo, the Journal daubed a tunic on Belmondo. In Southern California, where seminudity is a way of life, the Los Angeles Times does its best to spare readers what they...
...Scandinavian Airlines System recently submitted to the Times a full-page ad that had already appeared in other newspapers and magazines. It showed an inviting, bikini-clad blonde above the caption: "What to Show Your Wife in Scandinavia." But it clearly was not what to show your wife in Los Angeles. Before running the ad, the Times censor scrupulously amended the blonde's anatomy to conform to regulations. He removed her navel...