Word: collected
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...more songs from a new album (in New York alone his recording of The Mouse has sold more than a quarter of a million copies in the past month) and, more screams, the show is over. For doing just that five times a day for ten days, Soup will collect $20,000. The networks, says Irving Manager, are dying to try him again. Soupy's name is all over trading cards, pins, wallets, ties, sweat shirts, T shirts, pajamas, dolls, and he expects to gross $500,000 this year. He is an overshucked cornball, but he is the moment...
...visit foreign lands but loath to mix with ordinary tourists who never plumbed a cave? Travel agents, that's who. What's more, they're doing something about it. This year Academy Travel Ltd. will assemble an exclusive and hardy band of spelunkers in London, collect $195 a head, and lead them off on a somewhat sunless 15-day crawl through the caves of Rumania. In New York, Lindblad Travel Inc. has plans afoot for a special breeders' browse through European hogdom's foremost farms - a follow-up to earlier, highly successful cattle...
Bargain & Collect. Powers had a reputation to maintain as the newspaper-union boss who could do the most for his men. He called "chapel" meetings of his printers in the composing rooms of the Daily News and the Journal-American at hours neatly chosen to interfere with two editions of both papers. Powers was apparently hoping that the publishers would retaliate by locking the printers out - a move that would save him from the onus of calling a strike. But there was no lockout; the next move was up to Big Six. Then the publishers conceded. They offered Powers...
...loss was Harvard's sixth in seven games this year, and it was a heartbreaker for pitcher John Scott. The junior righthander pitched an excellent game, allowing only six singles in eight innings, but his teammates could only collect four hits and frittered away one golden scoring opportunity...
...ditch stand against a proposed eight-lane speedway that would cut their community in half. Running east-west alongside the town's main thoroughfare, it would link up other northern suburbs but do nothing for the town itself, seems to La Canadans little more than a ruse to collect $60 million in federal grants. The highway department claims that the projected-population figures for La Canada by 1980 necessitate the freeway. Planning Consultant Lyle Stewart retorts: "This area is built up with single-family units. The only way the population could increase is with multiple units, and the only...