Word: glasse
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...GLASS BOOTH. Robert Shaw indulges in some pop psychologizing in this complicated yarn about a Jewish business tycoon in Manhattan who is uncovered as a Nazi war criminal, then brought to trial in Tel Aviv, where he is uncovered again as a Jewish concentration-camp prisoner from World War II. Even the amazingly agile acting of Donald Pleasence and the sensitive direction of Harold Pinter cannot give substance, theatrical or philosophical, to a spurious script...
Several pieces of Cambridge Fire Department equipment fought the blaze to the delight of dozens of onlookers. Bystanders in the Quincy yard ran from showers of glass as firemen broke out windows in D-entry stairway and tossed damaged furniture from the second story windows. The crowd hissed a resident of the Quincy tower who played "Light My Fire" on his stereo until the police...
...GLASS BOOTH. Donald Pleasence displays furious intensity in his attack on the role of a Jewish tycoon who masquerades as a Nazi SS officer. But Robert Shaw's insights about victim and victimizer are transparent; his drama toys with the terrible reality of Hitler's final solution instead of illuminating...
...instant homes were the first of 200 being built in Chicago ghetto neighborhoods by National Homes and by Guerdon Industries. Equipped with factory-installed kitchen appliances, one-piece glass-fiber bathrooms and even air conditioning, they sell for only $14,500. In high-cost Chicago, similar-sized homes built by time-consuming conventional methods would ordinarily carry price tags of about $25,000. Thanks to such easy terms as $350 down and monthly mortgage payments of $125, National's module homes will reach families with incomes as low as $6,500 a year...
...many signs point to a return to protectionism. Two dozen U.S. industries are pressing for higher tariffs or import quotas on everything from shoes to glass, from steel to electronic components. Most such efforts have been rebuffed, but last month President Johnson signed a bill that more than tripled the import duty on various blends of woolens. Italy, which stands to lose $15 million in trade, is considering retaliation against U.S. exports. Other countries, of course, can be expected to do the same if tariffs on their exports to the U.S. are raised...