Word: call
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Stable Gallery this winter, also show a new, monumental serenity. Raffael now likes statelier themes: an Egyptian bust, a gem-encrusted crown, raised to a magical, almost religious level by his extraordinarily vibrant brushwork and imaginative palette. "I'm withdrawing a bit," he says, "searching for what archaeologists call 'a find,' for the jewels we can dig out of us." His Salmon is such a precious relic-a dying fish preserved by the artist's reverent brush as a glowing emblem of life...
...that, the firm that competitors call "the General Motors of the agency business" last week announced plans to invite the public along for the ride. J.W.T. filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission to make a public stock offering. This would enable the agency to reward its people more handsomely and give it cash to expand beyond last year's record billings of $638 million...
Ironically, the trade links between the two countries were created by what the Israelis call "blood money." Their industry was set up largely with the help of $900 million in reparations, which Bonn paid from 1953 to 1965, stipulating that most of the funds had to be spent in West Germany. Once the payments ended, trade replaced aid. Much of the German machinery acquired in the 1950s now needs replacement, and orders are flowing into Germany. Bonn has also buttressed the buy-German trend by providing $115 million in development loans since...
President Pusey said this morning that the decision to call in police to clear the building came out of the meeting which began yesterday afternoon and ended about 10 p.m. last night. Besides himself, the deans of the Graduate Schools, Deans Ford and Glimp, and other Administration officials were in attendance. "It became clear in the course of the evening that the only possible alternative [to calling in police] was to take no action at all," he said...
...that the administration called the police, they gave us the chance to have a taste of what outside society (might we call it the "real world"?) is like; we had a slight exposure to the suffering that black men, or coal miners, or striking factory workers, or draftees face every day. Rather than condemn the University administration, I think we should actually be grateful to them for giving us perhaps the most valid educational experience we could have had during all our years here. Barbara Brandt Research assistant, Graduate School of Design