Word: bingo
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...other tenants of the building he doesn't have much time to talk. "Hey," he says, rushing out of his office. "I don't know anything about this building. If you gotten my father, he could have told you everything, I'm busy, you know? I talk to you, bingo. I gotta talk to everybody...
Just because this particular play is destined for the dustbin does not mean that a varied season containing such up coming plays as Bingo, by England's Edward Bond, about Shakespeare's final years back in Stratford; Abigail Adams, Second First Lady, by Edith Owen; and The Last Meeting of the Knights of the White Magnolia, by Preston Jones, about a lunatic-fringe group from Texas, may not provide some aesthetic rewards. To take a risk is the regional theater's brand of courage...
...calender or two sponsored by the very same publication. Best of all was that rural passion for personal signs--dozens of them, informing people not to throw cigarettes down the toilets (ashtray provided), not to run the water too long, quiet hours 10 p.m. to 7 a.m., bingo, if you're interested, at a location in downtown Rhinelander. All very polite and designed to be helpful, please, please, please. Then the newspaper clippings, yelowing with age, in the main picturing grinning and slightly embarrassed men furling out large fish caught in the area. In the center of all the clips...
...while Congress felt that the producers needed no further incentive to get the oil out of the ground. That rationale still holds, and there is more. Old oil now supplies about 40 per cent of America's oil needs, and under controls is worth approximately $60 billion. Without controls, BINGO! that oil costs $160 billion. The difference would come from consumers and go to oil companies. President Ford assures us that he'll put a windfall profits tax on the oil companies, and use the revenues to finance tax rebates that will stimulate the economy. But the Democrats would rather...
Surrounded by seedy peep shows, pinball parlors and bingo halls, the aging, garish Blackpool Opera House usually gives billing to vaudeville acts and variety shows. Last week, however, it housed a sober assembly of 1,000 delegates who had come to Blackpool for the annual conference of Britain's Trades Union Congress. Casting their votes on behalf of Britain's 10.3 million trade union members, the delegates overwhelmingly ratified an "incomes policy" that will limit workers to wage increases of no more than $12.60 a week in the next twelve months. The vote was 6.9 million...