Word: game
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...hard to hide. And no club has stricter rules. Unlike other clubs, where a member merely has to vouch for his guests, for example, Augusta members must physically accompany guests around the course to make certain all niceties are observed; if a member is suddenly called away, the game is over. Roberts' rules of golfing order have provoked resentment on occasion. Explains one member: "A lot of our people are accustomed to being boss back home. They say things and people jump. That doesn't work at Augusta...
...earnings would also be hard hit, among them chemicals, electronic equipment and industrial machinery. The consequence, Administration leaders predict, would be higher prices, lower profits and fewer jobs at home, as well as shrinking markets for U.S. goods abroad. "To incite trade war would be a fool's game," says Treasury Secretary Henry Fowler, "since the U.S. would be bound to end up as a loser...
...their long-running game of oneupmanship, Greek Shipowners Aristotle Onassis, 61, and Stavros Niarchos, 58, have vied in everything from outfitting their yachts with art treasures to transforming their private islands into playgrounds for the beautiful people. But nothing has been more spirited than the rivalry between the onetime brothers-in-law-over Olympic Airways, which Onassis set up in 1957 after outbidding Niarchos for exclusive rights to run Greece's national airline...
...role. The stars are outshone by the supporting players, including Tom Courtenay as a psychotic British agent and Per Oscarsson as his junkie Russian counterpart, hopelessly in love with the heroin. Fortunately, they give Aspic some flavor as it moves toward a credibly tragic end, when Harvey suspects the game is up and utters the burnt-out lament: "I feel like a whore in a creaking...
...whole" is indefensible. Ethnic quotas are rightly repugnant to the University; it would make no sense to insist that Jews, Catholics, Italian Americans, and American Indians all be admitted in proportion to their percentage of the national population, and Negro admissions should not be reduced to this numbers game either. Harvard admission policies are the least legitimate target here for Afro's criticism. Harvard has aggressively sought Negro students for years (with recruiting help from Afro), and Dr. Chase Peterson, dean of admissions, indicated yesterday that the University will, as it must, become even more aggressive...