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...later interview, Vellucci said he does believe that the tax-exempt status of Harvard and other universities is vulnerable. "I think the mood of the people is that they're fed up with high taxes. We're dealing with bread and butter. They (Harvard) are dealing with turning out artists and lawyers," Vellucci said...

Author: By Leo FJ. Wilking, | Title: Tomorrow's Survivors Will Be The Winners Come November | 9/18/1972 | See Source »

Rats are the easiest to work with. For Willard, Di Sesso trained them to run toward their food, mostly peanut butter, at the sound of a beeper. When it came time for the rats to start munching on Star Ernest Borgnine, who was smeared with peanut butter, they were even polite enough to stop with the peanut butter. The rabbits, by contrast, appear never to have heard of Pavlov. "We trained them in California to associate food with clicking sounds, so that they would head in any direction you clicked from," says Lepus Producer A.C. Lyles. "When...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: Noah's Ark of Horrors | 8/14/1972 | See Source »

Skippy Peanut Butter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RETAILING: War in the Supermarkets | 8/14/1972 | See Source »

...first the bad news: Paul Butterfield's new band. Butter used to have the best big band in rock music, and at times, it was clear that what he was actually fronting was a very good soul band, nearly of the caliber of the Motown house band. But in the last six or eight months, he has disbanded it, in favor of the six man band he originally started in 1965. (I found his horn section, nearly intact, backing Stevie Wonder at the Rolling Stones Concerts.) In 1965, Paul Butterfield formed the first, and maybe the best, integrated Chicago-style...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Blues in the Night | 8/4/1972 | See Source »

...formulate, the young legions this year shattered political assumptions and shut down party machines that had been grinding on for decades. Through New Hampshire's bitter months, through the endlessly tedious precinct caucuses and state conventions, they mimeographed and telephoned and pounded door to door, living on peanut butter and jelly and spending their nights in sleeping bags on someone else's living-room floor. Their numbers grew with success; duty became dream became destiny; the impossible turned possible turned probable. Often with scant direction or help from the candidate himself, they built from the ground...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLITICS: The Battle for the Democracy Party | 7/17/1972 | See Source »

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