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...local critics were not deaf at last week's Boston opening, either. Elinor Hughes (Herald) found the number "just great." Kevin Kelly (Globe) cited Price's "vivid performance" and said he "sings with enough power and feeling to bring the roof down, and he does." Alta Maloney (Traveler) called it "a whopper of a show-stopper, sung in a voice that made chills go up and down the spine." T.K. Morse (Patriot Ledger) found him "glorious." Bradford Swan (Providence Journal) said Price sang "superbly," and Donald Cragin (Worcester Telegram) felt he performed "with the verve of one who has practiced...

Author: By Caldwell Titcomb, | Title: Gilbert Price--Velvet on His Voice | 4/1/1965 | See Source »

...Sentiments." When her husband died, Jacqueline Kennedy was already recognized as the most dazzling First Lady in U.S. lore. It was inevitable that anyone following her would suffer by comparison. Such was the lot of Claudia Alta Taylor Johnson, bearer of perhaps the most unfortunate public nickname in years. But what kind of name has Lady Bird made for herself? Reaction to her so far has been politely cool. Says Maggie Daly, columnist for Chicago's American: "She looks like every well-dressed woman of means. She does not have any special flair." Observes Françoise Giroud...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The White House: The First Lady Bird | 8/28/1964 | See Source »

...pioneered by Harvard Graduate School of Business shortly after World War II. Currently, M.I.T., Northwestern, Stanford, Cornell, the University of North Carolina, Carnegie Tech and Emory are among more than 50 schools offering programs at such widely varied places as Sea Island, Ga., Zion National Park, Utah, Banff, Alta., Blue Mountain Lake, N.Y., and College Station, Texas. A similar program, though not college-sponsored, is provided by Colorado's Aspen Institute, which runs five two-week courses through the year, with the added lure of skiing and sauna bathing. "The day is coming," says Columbia Graduate School of Business...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Adult Education: Refreshment on the Rock | 8/7/1964 | See Source »

...Deer, Alta., is a Canadian farm center of only 25,000 population. Yet in a single day recently, Red Deer's merchants rang up $1,000,000 in sales to Christmas-shopping prairie farmers. Some bought second and third TV sets; their wives got leopard jackets ("much choicer than mink") and Russian squirrel coats. A local Chrysler dealer had 68 paid-up back orders for cars, while the Ford man stopped taking orders altogether "until we catch up." For winter vacations, Red Deer's travel agents recommend Hawaii, Hong Kong, the West Indies. When summer comes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Canada: Spreading Wealth | 1/3/1964 | See Source »

Eugene Kinasewich of Lowell House and Edmonton, Alta, was yesterday elected first class marshal for the Class of '64's commencement in June. Second marshal is L. Scott Harshbarger of Eliot House and State College, Pa.; third is Louis G. Williams of Eliot House and Gladwyne, Pa., and fourth marshal is John Thorndike of Eliot House and Westport, Conn...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Kinasewich Elected First Class Marshal | 12/7/1963 | See Source »

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