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Dead Aim. Best of them all is the Los Angeles Dodgers' Sandy Koufax, 27. So far this season, Koufax has pitched one no-hitter (against Manager Dark's Giants), two two-hitters and four three-hitters. His earned run average is a lean 1.64, and he leads both major leagues with 163 strikeouts. He started last week by blanking the Cincinnati Reds on three hits, 4-0. Five days later, he picked up another shutout (his ninth) at the expense of the New York Mets, 6-0, and became the first pitcher in either league...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Baseball: Best of the Better | 7/19/1963 | See Source »

...point during the lavish opening of almost every new Hilton hotel, the houselights dim and spotlights pick out a lean, tall man with a shy smile on his permanently suntanned face. He escorts a pretty girl-usually a new one each time-to the center of the ballroom floor. Then, to the slow, stately strains of the violins, they point their feet, bow, turn about and sweep elegantly into an unfamiliar step. The dance is the courtly Varsoviana, brought to America from the palaces of Europe by Mexico's Emperor Maximilian; the man who puts his foot...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hotels: By Golly! | 7/19/1963 | See Source »

...Queen's private garden in London, on the Nile in Cairo and above the Bosporus in Istanbul, at the foot of the Elburz Mountains in Teheran. All of the hotels glisten and glitter, with an architecture that ranges from international slab to a crosshatched radio-cabinet style. They lean heavily on the anonymity of modernism, and display a spartan opulence designed as much to save the hotel money as to attract the clients. In countries where there is no previous standard of hotel excellence, Hiltons are oases; in such old cities as Rome, London or Paris, they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hotels: By Golly! | 7/19/1963 | See Source »

Billions for Defense. The four major NATO nations in Western Europe-Britain, France, Italy and West Germany-have increased their defense spending an average 45% since 1959 to $15 billion this year. Despite the trend in Britain to lean more and more on the U.S. for its major defense protection, its defense budget this year is $5.2 billion, or about 7% of its gross national product (v. almost 10% for the U.S.). President de Gaulle, with his longing to have his own independent force de frappe, has set France's 1963 defense spending at $3.7 billion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Western Europe: An Arsenal of Its Own | 7/19/1963 | See Source »

Like their U.S. parent, the two companies founded by Zeckendorf have fallen on lean times. Last year Webb & Knapp (Canada) lost $1,264,000, in part because of a slide in Canadian real-estate prices, and Trizec lost $2,877,000 because costs of constructing its $100 million Place Ville Marie-Montreal's Rockefeller Center-overshot estimates by $25 million...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Canada: Zeckendorf Retreats | 7/12/1963 | See Source »

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