Word: drink
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Aside from describing the average subscriber, the profile gives a few fascinating glimpses of that small group outside the mainstream: the 3% who serve Irish whisky, the 5% who own organs, the 2% who drink bottled water. We worry about the 6% who have no life insurance. What do the 1% who own vacant lots plan to do with their property? And will the 2% who have only a grade-school education go on to higher learning...
...invited to enter the CRIMSON'S Fall Competition for all four boards--News, Editorial, Photo, and Business. The first introductory meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. tonight at the CRIMSON'S 14 Plympton St. town house. There will be tours for the curious, drink for the thirsty, plenty of lists for the compulsive joiners, and sparkling conversation for everyone else. You needn't blow an inheritance to get on the CRIMSON, nor need you be experienced. Come and see for yourself...
BART: Look, Grant saved the Union didn't he, and they named a whiskey after him. But, my prime concern is our hard-drinking, draft-dodging college youth. I want to assure them that they are doing their part sipping Bourbon while the soldiers do the fighting. After all, each drink pays for another bullet. And we'll underscore their contribution by urging them to drink by the jigger and "Have a shot...
...hours that James Thompson Prothro Jr. calls his "thinking hours." It could be chess that Tommy Prothro is thinking about: he is a tournament champion. Or bridge: he collects master points. Or business: he is heir to a Memphis real estate fortune, owns two soft-drink bottling plants in Oregon. But right now he is trying to decide whether to counteract a strong-side blitz with a sweep or a Sprint-H. Football is Tommy's favorite hobby-and it also happens to be his profession. At 46, Prothro is head coach of the U.C.L.A. Bruins, who last week...
...called him "hipper-than-thou." San Francisco's Columnist Ralph Gleason dismissed his act as "boring" and advised him that "the nightclubs are in far less need of preachers than the cathedrals." He sometimes has to deal with heckling spectators who have had a bit too much to drink, but in general the audience, which often includes priests and ministers, seems to like his act. The Rev. James Clark Brown, pastor of San Francisco's First Congregational Church, calls Father Boyd's appearance at the hungry i "the most effective and, for my money [$3.50 a head...