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...going to ruin a good thing," said Joan Kelly, 37, a real estate agent who keeps a regular supply of 24 cases of Coke stashed in the basement of her home in Oak Park, near Chicago. "I love Coke. We all do. My husband. My kids." Said Christine Dale, a student at the University of Chicago graduate school of business: "I think this is definitely a step in the wrong direction." But other early tasters liked the new Coke (see box). Said Emanuel Goldman, beverage analyst for San Francisco's Montgomery Securities: "It's more guzzleable. My guess is that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Fiddling with the Real Thing | 5/6/1985 | See Source »

SENTENCED. Dennis Dale ("Denny") McLain, 41, Detroit Tigers pitching star from 1963 to 1970, whose 31-6 record in 1968 makes him the last pitcher in the major leagues to post a 30-win season; to 23 years in prison, including three concurrent eight-year terms for racketeering, extortion and conspiracy and 15 years for possession of 3 kg of cocaine with intent to sell; in Tampa, Fla. Said a tearful McLain: "I don't know how you get to where I am today from where I was 17 years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: May 6, 1985 | 5/6/1985 | See Source »

...decision will be reached before July, when the first multi-year grants are scheduled to be awarded, Dale said...

Author: By D. JOSEPH Menn, | Title: Reagan's Science Funding Cuts Called Illegal By Federal Agency | 4/3/1985 | See Source »

...Administration is consulting lawyers and may challenge the GAO findings, officials said. OMB spokesman Edwin Dale yesterday agreed that the tactics used to cut the funds were unorthodox, but added the department had "Serious legal doubts" about the GAO report which called for further investigation...

Author: By D. JOSEPH Menn, | Title: Reagan's Science Funding Cuts Called Illegal By Federal Agency | 4/3/1985 | See Source »

Iacocca claims that before he took Dale Carnegie courses at age 25, he was a terrible speechmaker. Nowadays in public, and often in private, he seems more a crackling stand-up monologuist than a sober corporate spokesman, a sort of Rodney Dangerfield who gets all the respect in the world, or George C. Scott's Patton turned happy and unthreatening. "I gotta tell ya," Iacocca told a wined-and-dined gathering of stock-market analysts in Detroit earlier this month, "with our $2.4 billion in profits last year, they gave me a great big bonus. Really, it's almost obscene...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Spunky Tycoon Turned Superstar | 4/1/1985 | See Source »

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