Word: crediters
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...young Vicksburg Negroes who one day marched through that town, carrying a banner emblazoned with "Thank you Commies." When confronted by a delegation of astounded city fathers, the leader of the march explained respectfully that "I don't know what Commies are but the papers give them all the credit for this civil rights business, and that's good enough...
...will teach in Humanities 3, the college's first credit course involving play introduction. Participation in a Loeb main play will be a course requirement, will also teach English 125, "Tudor Stuart Drama...
...form or another-by such experts as Prime Minister Wilson, former British Exchequer Chancellor Reginald Maudling, Greece's Central Bank Chief Xenophon Zolotas and Bank of Italy Governor Guido Carli. Wilson's version of the plan would work this way: 1) the IMF would create certificates of credit; 2) countries would buy these certificates with their own currencies, use them to settle foreign debts; 3) the IMF would use the national currencies that it collected to back its certificates. The IMF would also lend its certificates to underdeveloped countries in order to expand their buying power in world...
Director Berlanga, to his immense credit, works exclusively with live ones. His characters are sharply observed, warmly played. When Manfredi is summoned at last to finish off a condemned man on the sunny island of Majorca, he takes his wife along for their honeymoon. The gay holidays end with a jolt in a bleak prison courtyard where uniformed guards are forced to drag the reluctant executioner and his victim to ward the hour of judgment. The comment is strong but disappointingly literal, for Life loses ground as a first-rank satire when it stops kidding its message and starts preaching...
Graham-White deserves credit for the restraint of the whole production. Zukav didn't need to mock himself, but none of the less capable actors was asked to either. Graham-White knew how to sophisticate his show, and he has made David Zalkind's dramatic monologue as Slitgut a farcical interlude legitimately set off from the rest of the play, and, by contrast of style setting off the virtues of the cast he had to work with...