Word: fats
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...claims that in some cases they were buying lumber from big mills at controlled prices and selling it on the open market for much more. Last month Kosters convinced Rumsfeld that requests by automakers for price boosts on 1973 cars should be resisted. He argued that Detroit could make fat profits through increased sales even without price boosts. The Price Commission rejected General Motors' and Ford's increases (TIME, Sept...
...quarterback-in-motion play, the Crimson stepped on Yale, 35-16. Last Wednesday, after two weeks of preseason practice Restic leaned forward in his chair flashed his salesman's smile and chortled. The systems in. If Restics players really can understand and execute the complexities of his fat play book. Harvard will be hot this year On paper at least the Crimson has the talent to a serious contender for the Ivy League title...
...well in New York, Atlanta and Chicago, and are expected to be one of the most popular styles this fall and winter-even for women whose less than perfect figures have until now kept them out of pants. Unlike jeans, which tend to reveal everything, palazzos conceal everything, even fat hips, skinny thighs and thick calves. "They give a gal who has something to hide the place to hide it," explains Francine Farkas of Alexander's department stores in New York City...
...movie has several excellent scenes, most prominently an attempted bank robbery staged with deadly precision, and fine performances by Scott and Keach, much more effective here than in Fat City. Smaller roles have been cast with a fine eye for character detail. Clifton James as a gruff old police pro, Stefan Gierasch as an indignant slum landlord, and the ravishing Rosalind Cash as Keach's black girl friend are especially memorable. Jane Alexander portrays Keach's wife, however, as if she were a prune intended for medicinal use only, and Scott Wilson's rookie cop is totally...
During the campaign, Agnew will continue to address those $1,000-a-plate dinners where Republican fat cats come to devour the Veep's red meat. But Agnew has been instructed not to become any more of a campaign issue himself than he already is thanks to past rhetoric. "Give the Democrats hell," the President advised him, but judicious hell, and lay off everybody else, particularly the press. Agnew will not, of course, take the high road. That is still reserved for the President. Agnew will have to find something in between, perhaps what McGovern sarcastically calls "low-road...