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Usage:

...portable refrigerator, which will operate equally well on 1) 12-volt auto or boat batteries, 2) standard no-volt house current, 3) bottled gas. The Escort Mark II refrigerator, made by the Selectra Corp., Buffalo, weighs less than 30 Ibs., takes up little more room than a suitcase, keeps up to 35 Ibs. of food and drink chilled on even the longest trips. Price...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Marketplace: New Products | 6/1/1962 | See Source »

Last week Block, 24, a Belgian-born Frenchman who lives in Mexico City, was back before the judges* for another try at the Leventritt Award, which brings $1,000 in cash and appearances with the New York Philharmonic, Cleveland, Detroit, Pittsburgh, Buffalo and Denver symphony orchestras. Onto a stage at the Metropolitan Museum of Art paraded four other finalists: Ralph Votapek, who gracefully turned the willowy phrases of Beethoven's Concerto No. 4; Bela Szilagi, whose Brahms and Liszt were played with cohesive intensity; Marilyn Neeley, a petite brunette who mastered the pyrotechnics of Tchaikovsky with brute female strength...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Coronation Concert | 5/25/1962 | See Source »

...gazetteer of U.S. night life, St. Louis has never placed very high. Like Atlanta, Cleveland, Buffalo or Pittsburgh, it has been traditionally an entertain-at-home sort of town, and with the exception of a night at the Symphony or Municipal Opera, most of St. Louis spent its evenings the way much of the rest of the U.S. did: watching television or drinking beer in somebody else's living room...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The City: No Squares on the Square | 5/18/1962 | See Source »

...Casino stage-successor to the Howard where "Buffalo Bill" Cody, John Wilkes Booth and Gypsy Rose Lee performed for beyond a century--has been the scene of the most riotous productions in staid New England history. Across the Casino ramp have scurried some of the best-set headliners of latter day burlesque, in some of their least-dressed performances...

Author: By Russell B. Roberts, | Title: Boston Burlesque Dies With the Closing of the Casino | 5/7/1962 | See Source »

...neglected Howard Athenaeum in Scollay Square fell before the encroachments of the same Government Center. Known to its loyal Harvard patrons as the Old Howard, the theater was closed in 1953 for unpaid back taxes. The Howard stage, largest in Boston, had seen the graces of Gypsy Rose Lee, "Buffalo Bill" Cody, and John Wilkes Booth. During more than a century, it was used for religious revivals, legitimate theater, vaudeville, burlesque--even as a factory. When the end of the Howard was too close to be averted, the Howard National Theater and Museum Committee sprang up to preserve...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Things Past | 4/10/1962 | See Source »

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