Word: goldene
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Harvard hockey team broke Clarkson 8-3 Saturday night by methodically bending the Golden Knights until, in the third period, they snapped...
There is no cheap or easy way for America to solve its deficits dilemma. No matter how it tinkers with the golden rules, it ultimately will have to achieve what the bankers call equilibrium-which is to say, a surplus or deficit of not much more than $1 billion yearly. As soon as it does that, the gold problem will disappear. "Then," says Germany's top banker, Emminger, "the U.S. can do whatever it wishes about the gold price. Then everyone, or almost everyone, will be quite content to hold onto his dollars. There is no advantage in holding...
...plus side of this season, TV finally showed signs of growing up in matters of censorship and salesmanship. The networks now schedule movies that deal with touchy themes-prostitution in Never on Sunday, drug addiction in Man with a Golden Arm. Both films were considered too hot to handle two years ago. Following the lead of Bell Telephone, Xerox and Hallmark, an increasing number of sponsors bunch or juggle the sequence of their commercials to suit the format of a show. And in upcoming months, the programmers are preparing the TV, debuts of such film stars as Doris Day, William...
...design-life of a product," said Betty, "but I believe it's his due. Why shouldn't the housewife know there are 'x' number of hours of service in her washing machine, or that the life expectancy of a toaster falls short of a golden wedding anniversary? The manufacturer knows, and the marketer knows. Shouldn't the consumer also know...
...Whiteman, 76, pop conductor who for two generations filled dance floors, concert halls and the air-waves with his "symphonic jazz"; of a heart attack; in Doylestown, Pa. Trained in the classics on the viola, yet fascinated with jazz's "abandon," Pops Whiteman arrived at a sweet and golden middle road that pleased audiences everywhere-on million-seller records (Whispering), radio, TV, nightclubs and the concert stage. He took chances on new music (Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue) and new musicians (Tommy Dorsey, Jack Teagarden), but his staple was rich, smooth orchestration that kept his foot-long baton...