Word: fasts
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Shadow Ran Fast, Sands...
...news has earned its way onto the Trib's front page. New recruits to the paper's team of columnists have run down much of their material within the confines of the city. A revamped Sunday magazine, New York, keeps on top of the city's fast-changing fads and fashions; one recent article gave city housewives much the best of it in comparison with their sisters in suburbia. Most impressive of all, for the past eight weeks the Trib has been running an incisive daily series on New York's brutal and burgeoning big-city...
...eyes of most buyers. Discount houses commonly offer small, 19-in. color sets for less than $300, and RCA last week temporarily cut the list price of its cheapest set from $400 to $380 in a one-shot promotion. These stripped-down, metal-encased models do not move as fast as the higher-priced ones; the hottest sellers are the walnut or mahogany models that have such popular accessories as remote controls and automatic demagnetizers and sell for $500 or more...
Mohibulla, 27-year-old professional at the Harvard Club of Boston, is unbelievably fast. His uncle Hashim, 50, can still match him in shots if not in steps. Hashim is pro at Detroit's Uptown Athletic Club...
...million by 1970. Venezuela has done such an effective job of mopping up its Communists that Jersey Standard's Creole and other oil companies, which transferred more than $100 million out of the country in 1962 and 1963, are pumping capital back in again, though not so fast as in the banner year of 1957. Mexico's President Diaz Ordaz recently set a new tone by declaring: "We need and welcome private capital." In the light of anti-inflation measures in Brazil, the World Bank, in which the U.S. has the greatest stake, has agreed to lend money...