Word: bonding
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...America. Last January, however. Run Run decided to peddle his Kung Fu movies to a wider audience. "American people always love action," he says to explain his Great Leap Forward. "Hollywood made lots of money with cowboys until Italians made cowboy pictures with more action. Next came James Bond." He adds proudly: "Now from Hong Kong comes Kung...
Feeling unwanted in the stock market, individual investors have found plenty of other places to put their money. Since 1970, savings institutions have accumulated $180 billion in new deposits, some of it at the expense of Wall Street. Closed-end bond funds, which promise steady returns of up to 7.5%, attracted $1.2 billion in new money last year. Speculators who want fast action are setting one trading record after another in corn, soybeans and other commodities...
...make small contributions to support full-time consumer advocates at state and local levels. The PlRGs, says Nader, "operate independently-our only connection with them is inspirational" -but they have all the gutsiness of their mentor. The New Jersey PIRG led a successful fight against a $650 million transportation bond issue, and the Minnesota group is suing the U.S. Forest Service to halt timber cutting in a canoeing area along the Canadian border...
...campaigns since 1956, when he was an advanceman for Nixon's re-election as Vice President. He had become probably the second most powerful man in the Government because he determined just who could see the President or whose memos would reach Nixon's desk. Ehrlichman, a Seattle bond lawyer who had been a U.C.L.A. classmate of Haldeman's, had joined the Nixon team as an advanceman in the 1960 campaign against John Kennedy. He had become almost the equivalent in domestic affairs of Henry Kissinger in foreign policy...
...couple of days later to see what The Cocktail Hostesses at the West End Cinema had to offer. I should have known better. This bit of cinematic diarrhea runs about 80 minutes. The "plot" is merely an alternation between the cocktail room where the heroine (played by ample Renee Bond) makes $50.00 dates and the bedrooms where she earns her pay. The camera-work and editing are so porn-sloppy that they soon destroy any illusion of real intercourse, and any erotic value quickly dissipates...