Word: autumns
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...film tells the actions of three sisters and a maid who wait through the autumn in a country mansion for one of the sisters to die. Agnes (Harriet Andersson) has cancer; her older sister Karin (Ingrid Thulin), the smartest and severest of the group, and her other sister, Maria (Liv Ullmann) an overripe coquette, have temporarily left their husbands--a diplomat and a businessman--to nurse her at their childhood home. The peasant girl, Anna (Kari Sylwa), is a servant who has been with the family for years and is devoted to Agnes...
...Street is probably overdoing its pessimism. Interest rates are not likely to rise high enough to produce a serious credit squeeze, as they did in 1966 and 1969. Alan Greenspan, a member of TIME's Board of Economists, predicts that short-term rates will taper off in the autumn after peaking at about 7% for Treasury bills. The Federal Reserve expanded the money supply by a healthy but temperate 7.4% from the fourth quarter of 1971 to the same period last year. Burns appears willing to moderate that growth rate only slightly this year. In December, the money supply...
With Vujovic and Hinze out of the picture for next season, Munro will have to plug some gaping holes in next year's team. The two sophomores combined for 14 goals and 14 assists last fall. Another autumn may be bleak for soccer fans.Former Crimson booters DRAGAN VUJOVIC and BENT HINZE went home to Europe after academic disillusionments at Harvard...
...opening night. With the President no longer doing editorials singlehandedly, the paper took a sharper editorial stance. Through the Spring of 1915. The Crimson ardently opposed involvement in the First World War, a controversial but well articulated position which R.H. Stiles '16 reversed when he became President in the autumn of 1915. With the exception of "the crew scandal, in which the paper charged favoritism in the selection of the first boat, the War was the only pressing issue of the period. Enthusiasm for war combined with an ill-disguised distaste for Wilson's reelection in 1916 to produce...
Nineteen twenty was the year of the new press. A gift of $1,000 in the autumn of 1919 made the purchase possible and finally The Crimson had a bigger paper. A column wider and five inches longer, the new sheet was ready to handle the news explosion which occurred at Harvard between the wars. The editorial page, which had gone from one to two columns before the War, used its extra ten inches to take up the cudgels of a slow of new causes undreamed of before the War. Just before the new press was installed a supplement...