Word: enjoy
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Coach John Yovicsin last night expressed great satisfaction with the new regulation and predicted that everyone would enjoy the game more next Fall. Yovicsin said that now the coaches would be able to coach and the officials officiate rather than waste time on bookkeeping. Spectators can look forward to more wide-open tactics...
...been thinking, as I suppose many of you have, of a speech Mr. Liehling gave at the Crimson's ninetieth anniversary dinner last January. Mr. Liehling was a man who was honest enough never to have much small talk, and he was a man who was enough never to enjoy speaking to a group that was much larger than could be made do fit around a good-sired dinner table. He was also, even last January, not in the best of health, but he alosys loved the working press and even seemed to feel kindly toward the undergraduate press...
HAVE YOUR HOLIDAY WITH ALL RISK ELIMINATED. ENJOY A HOLIDAY YOU WILL REMEMBER FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE. For the 651 passengers and 390 crewmen and relatives aboard the liner, it was indeed a Christmas they would never forget. In the dead of night, four days out of Southampton last week, the Lakonia was swept by a raging, uncontrollable fire that left the 20,314-ton vessel an abandoned, gutted ruin. Of the 1,041 persons aboard, 91 were known dead and 64 more were missing in the rolling Atlantic swells...
...Ringing Bells. Tragedy was the farthest thing from anyone's mind when the Lakonia left Southampton. Most of the passengers were elderly Britishers off to enjoy Christmas in the sun; three honeymoon couples were on board, as well as schoolboys joining their parents in Madeira and a group of five London taxi drivers on holiday. On the first day at sea, Captain Mathios Zarbis, 53, ordered the only boat drill held during the cruise. Only the constant trouble with the Lakonia's electrical system gave reason to suspect trouble ahead...
...others it already has in the works. Driving twelve years ago with his wife and four of his five children, Memphis Realtor Kemmons Wilson was shocked to discover that motels charged $2 a night for each child. He decided to open a motel in which parents could enjoy some luxury at moderate prices and have their children put up free. The idea caught on-not only with families but with traveling businessmen and eager franchisers; today Wilson, 50, flies 150,000 miles annually to open new inns or pick additional locations. Although innkeeping has made him a millionaire, he still...