Word: adding
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...PRODUCERS. A wild, ad-lib energy that explodes in a series of sight gags and punch lines makes this saga of two sleazy stage producers (Zero Mostel, Gene Wilder) uproariously funny for at least half its running time, after which Mel Brooks the writer fails Mel Brooks the director by slipping into something sentimental...
...supposed to regulate. Its ultimate power, the license revocation, is rarely invoked. And when it proposes an industry rule, the commission invariably backs down before implementation. In 1963, it recommended a regulation codifying the National Association of Broadcasters' own gentleman's agreement of 18 minutes' maximum ad time per hour on radio, and 16 minutes on TV. But as soon as the House Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee began to rumble about the rule, the FCC withdrew. And last May, the commission approved a license for a Virginia radio station that plans to devote...
...unions demanded that Hearst give them space to reply, but he would not even let them pay for an ad. An air of gloom has settled on strike headquarters, two blocks from the Examiner. The unions are convinced that Hearst means to break them once and for all; the city's other daily, the Los Angeles Times, has no unions. "I wish I could see the end in sight," says Robert Rupert, international representative of the American Newspaper Guild. "But there's been no progress. I go into each negotiating session with the hope that we can discuss...
Girls are now canvassing the Radcliffe dorms, asking contributions of 50 cents. Ninety dollars are needed to pay for the ad, Miss Koshland said. The girls also plan to order buttons bearing their slogan...
...suggestion that the ad include names and telephone numbers of the "girls who say "yes" was not approved...