Word: bank
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE CALL THE EYE BANK...
...economic policies, because wage and price restraints are now the law. The vote will make more difficult the renewal of the measures when they expire late next year, but Wilson is committed to his policies. Some of their first optimistic returns came in last week, when the Bank of England announced a handsome $504 million increase in gold and foreign-currency reserves during September...
...save money, each cameo guest is given perhaps dozens of one-liners to recite. Those gags that are not used on one show are preserved on tape, along with an assortment of skits and acts, for use in future shows; they are numbered and filed in a "joke bank" under such headings as "Joke Wall" or "Cocktail Party...
...royal household. Yet he and his four readers have also played the role of arbiters of public taste, passing judgment on some 800 new scripts each year. Their esthetic qualifications have been uncertain at best. The present Lord Chamberlain, Lord Cobbold, 64, is a former governor of the Bank of England. Cobbold is generally respected for his liberal views on what is dramatically permissible, but many of his predecessors have been less enlightened. George Bernard Shaw once complained that the Lord Chamberlain "robs, insults, and suppresses me as if he were the Czar of Russia. I must submit in order...
Short-Lived Title. Lately, the ailing nucleus of the city has been making a remarkable recovery. A burst of new construction-gleaming office towers, bank headquarters and a handsome civic center for the arts-has rejuvenated much of the area. Over the past eight years, the city's businessmen have committed $800 million for downtown building and remodeling. By 1970, that investment will yield 9,000,000 sq. ft. of new office space, almost twice as much as was built downtown in the first 60 years of the century. In the process of rejuvenation, the old heart...