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Word: denmark (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...small Vevey factory in which Henri Nestlé had been producing milk pap for babies, Nestlé has consistently been characterized by a rare combination of imaginative salesmanship and financial caution. With uninhibited confidence, Nestlé has made a success of peddling canned milk in dairy-rich Denmark and instant coffee in Brazil. Most of the company's earnings are poured back into expansion: its 70,000 shareholders, many of them Swiss farmers, get only a 1.2% annual dividend and equally meager information on Nestlé's fiscal condition. Explains one Nestlé executive: "Reticence hasn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Switzerland: Soup to Nuts | 6/8/1962 | See Source »

...says he was. "Amateur officials used me for their excuse. 'How can you be for open tennis?' they asked each other, 'when you know it will fall into the hands of Kramer?'" At first, Kramer tried to build up the pro game, signed new players: Denmark's Kurt Nielsen, Chile's Luis Ayala, the U.S.'s Barry MacKay and Butch Buchholz. "But it soon became clear," wrote Kramer, "that my pro tour could not thrive on its own without open championships." So he decided to get out completely-in hopes that the I.L.T.F...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Abdication of a Pro | 6/1/1962 | See Source »

Summoned back to Government service after a nine-year hiatus was Mrs. Eugenie Anderson, 52, quietly elegant Minnesota Democrat who became the first woman ambassador in U.S. history when Harry Truman sent her to Denmark...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: May 25, 1962 | 5/25/1962 | See Source »

With support from the Benelux nations and. if they are admitted, her former "Outer Seven" trading partners-Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Portugal, Austria and Switzerland-Britain would obviously challenge the present Franco-German dominance of the Common Market. With all those countries included, the result may be a "Big Europe," many Common Market partisans fear, bound by commercial rather than political ties and in danger (as Adenauer puts it) of "growing so fat that it bursts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Common Market: The Terms for Britain | 5/18/1962 | See Source »

Silent Mirror. Though the book is overlong and exaggeratedly dramatic, it is full of surprising incidents. When Jenny stayed with friends in Denmark, Hans Christian Andersen would come around to tell stories to the children of the house, a pretext for seeing her. He fell in love with her. He wrote The Emperor's Nightingale for her. When she was cold toward him, he wrote The Snow Queen. When he begged her to marry him, she silently handed him a mirror. That night, he wrote The Ugly Duckling. (Author Schultz offers a modified version of this famous anecdote...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: This Swede | 5/18/1962 | See Source »

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