Word: cleaning
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Harvard's Health Service is Considered One of the Best.... Farnsworth two months later. After sentencing a local 19-year-old for selling drugs in Harvard Square, Midlesex Superior Court Judge Frank W. Tomasello charged that there was a serious drug problem here and urged an investigation to "clean out Harvard Square;" the Cambridge City Council responded in kind, citing evidence of narcotics transactions in Square cafeterias...
...state prison inmates who volunteered for tedious and sometimes painful tests, Dr. Kligman offers some negative findings. DMSO, he says, provides practically no relief for itching or superficial pain. As a germ killer, it is weak "and far inferior to alcohol." It does nothing to promote the healing of clean, simple burns, and it worsened one of ten ultraviolet burns. DMSO also failed to tranquilize any of 20 men in a six-month test. Nevertheless, it has some remarkably beneficial properties...
Their show is relentlessly in character. Festus gives his goose call. Doc up and says, "My cousin's so tall she hunts geese with a rake." The delivery is always slow-motion ("You can't Bob Hope 'em," says Stone) and fair-circuit clean. About as daring as they got at the Indiana State Fair last week was the routine in which Festus reported, "I've got 'seenus' trouble." "You mean sinus," corrected Doc. "No," rejoined Festus, "I was out with a pretty little girl last night and her husband seen...
...turn it out. When General Electric introduced its slicing knife nearly three years ago, retailers scoffed; today 32 companies market 103 models, and the total number of electric knives sold is expected to rise to 5,000,000 this year from 1964's 2,500,000. One Clean Shirt. After an introductory deluge marked by very high sales, small appliances usually level off onto a steady market. The electric hair dryer hit a 9,700,000 peak in 1963, has now settled down to 5,000,000 yearly. To compensate for this leveling-off process, small-appliance makers compete...
Died. Just Lunning, 55, president since 1952 of Georg Jensen, Manhattan emporium of Scandinavian silver, ceramics and furnishings founded by his father in 1923, a Harvard-educated lawyer from Odense, Denmark, who so successfully promoted the clean and simplified lines of modern Scandinavian design that they have found their way into almost every U.S. home, increasing his store's sales by 55%; of a heart attack; in Manhattan...