Word: dream
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...juxtaposed a cosmetics consultant, urging clients to use a combination of five or six preparations, with a dermatologist who said that one or two would do. Of course, manufacturers know that-and so do women. But as Narrator McCutchen said: "How can there be a reasonable price for a dream...
...aristocratic grace are reminiscent of a medieval tapestry. Without her, Camelot would be disastrous. With her surprisingly true voice and regal talents, it has its brief, shining moments, though in the end Camelot is reduced to Camelittle. Arthur's final nostalgic song seems less a memorial for the dream castle that never was than for the picture that might have been...
Within months after V-E day, Stalin's "dream" of acquiring a buffer zone along Russia's western border had come true. Kennan dismisses as absurd the notion that Stalin's expansionist appetite was fed by fears of the U.S. or anger at not being offered enormous sums of American aid. He recalls what a Soviet friend told him in 1944: "This is something you should bear in mind about the Russian. The better things go for him, the more arrogant he is. When we are successful, keep...
...mail indicates that last week's cover of the poll-leading Republican dream ticket-Nelson Rockefeller for President and Ronald Reagan for Vice President-was read with exceptional interest wherever politicians gather. At no place was it studied more raptly than aboard the S.S. Independence, where the nation's Governors were holding their 59th annual conference...
Many harddriving, hard-driven businessmen dream of retiring to the academic life. Ernest C. Arbuckle, longtime dean of Stanford University's Graduate School of Business, has reversed the procedure by announcing that he will leave Stanford next July and get back to business. Next assignment: the chairmanship of San Francisco's big (assets: $4.57 billion) Wells Fargo Bank...