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Meetoff's manager snarls at him. "Wolf'em down. wolf'em down...

Author: By Gene Goltz, | Title: Tufts pancake eaters gobble way to crown | 2/11/1970 | See Source »

...fast, and he is booked into Florida and Mississippi. A Florida dealer has sold 30,000 "God Bless Spiro Agnew" posters. In California one enterprising printer is marketing 50,000 "I Like Spiro" bumper stickers. Others cropping up on America's bumpers include "Sock It to 'Em, Spiro," "Spiro Of '76" and "Agnew Tells It Like It Is!" In Pennsylvania, Spirophiles have started SAFARI, "Spiro Agnew Fans and Rooters Inc." Republicans around the nation are clamoring for Agnew appearances...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Vice Presidency: Spiro of '76? | 2/2/1970 | See Source »

...White Women. Wyatt professes that he acted not only for profit but to bring new industry to St. Clair. He also expresses growing admiration for the Muslims. "The more I find out about the Muslims, the better I like 'em," he says. "They don't believe in smoking, drinking or adultery: they have no interest in white women; they believe in hard work and segregation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Races: Muslims in Alabama | 2/2/1970 | See Source »

...that will eventually drive their circulation past 1,000,000-a readership exceeded by only two newspapers in the Federal Republic. "I don't bother with sports or politics," says Publisher Rosenberg, who has only three full-time $218-a-month writers on his staff. "I give 'em sex, lots of it, straight and enjoyable. You never read about Viet Nam in my papers." That could change, of course, if anyone from the Nachrichten ever makes it to Saigon's Cholon red-light district...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: West Germany: Riding the Sexwelle | 1/19/1970 | See Source »

Satirist Stan Freberg was a pioneer in sneak-it-to-'em inspiration. Commissioned by the United Presbyterian Church in 1963, Freberg turned out a series of low-key but catchy radio ads. Franciscan Friars Karl Holtsnider and Emery Tang of Los Angeles used a similar approach on TV with a pilot Mother's Day spot in 1966: the camera simply panned across the faces of mothers of many races and nations. Now the Franciscans have a 20-man staff and a $150,000 annual budget, funded by 3,000 fellow friars and affiliated laymen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Spots for God | 1/12/1970 | See Source »

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