Word: krones
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...vying with Ted DeMars for the starting position. DeMars was undoubtedly the team's best runner by the end of the season, and he will be hard to displace. Not to mention Steve Harrison- the man DeMars replaced- who is also returning, and freshman whiz Nick Leone. And Chuck Krone, who was injured this year, will be returning and he may be even better than DeMars...
...consumer's careful spending is influencing a wide range of products in a variety of ways. Housewives are becoming highly selective in their purchases. The main question they ask, says Gene Case, president of Manhattan's Case & Krone, is "What can I stop buying?" Case's agency, for instance, is trying to broaden the appeal of Angostura Bitters beyond that of a cocktail flavoring and increase its use as a seasoner for low-cost meals. The campaign offers suggestions on "how to repair TV dinners" and "how to make 89? chuck taste like $1.29 sirloin...
...plays were produced by the Negro Ensemble Company, founded two years ago by Actor-Playwright Douglas Turner Ward, Actor Robert Hooks and Producer Gerald Krone. The company is the apex of a genuine black breakthrough that occurred off-Broadway during the 1960s. The small theaters, mostly below 14th Street in Manhattan, were the training or proving grounds not only for Moses Gunn but for James Earl Jones (The Great White Hope) and Diana Sands (The Owl and the Pussycat"), as well as for Gloria Foster, Clarence Williams III, Cicely Tyson, Barbara Ann Teer, Rosalind Cash, Lou Gossett, Vinie Burrows, Yaphet...
Philadelphia Lawyer. The economic muscle behind the Negro Ensemble Company is a $434,000 Ford Foundation grant, but the igniting will and brainpower belong to a triumvirate who conceived the project and run the company: Hooks, 30, Negro Playwright Douglas Turner Ward, 38, and Gerald Krone, 34, a white producer with a string of off-Broadway hits. "My thoughts were," says Hooks, "producers will only hire a Negro for that special role. Yet there's no reason why the part of a Philadelphia lawyer can't be played by a Negro if he's a better actor...
Among industrial nations, Austria's schilling (down 2.1%) was last year's most stable currency, and Denmark's krone (down 6.9%) the least. The purchasing power of the U.S. dollar sank 2.8% last year, but its performance during the 1956-66 decade was better: it eroded by an average of only 1.8% a year, the lowest rate among major industrial powers. In little Guatemala, sound management has kept the quetzal from depreciating in the past ten years. A sampling of inflation's global grip...