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McGlothlin's latest turnabout began last year when he was farmed back down to Seattle, where he caught the eye of Bob Lemon, onetime star pitcher for the Cleveland Indians. Jim went to Seattle with an overhand fastball, a nickel curve, and simplistic notions about strategy: if the bases were loaded and the count was 3 and 2, he threw the next pitch low and away. At least nobody ever hit him in a spot like that. Lemon taught him how to throw a sidearm fastball, a slider and a change of pace, and he also taught McGlothlin something...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Baseball: The Angel | 7/14/1967 | See Source »

...response to arguments that the incinerator might be a "lemon," DeGuglielmo answered that Cambridge would not have to pay a cent for the incineration of rubbish if the incinerator didn't work. "We are not investing five cents of our money until we get five cents in return; and if we don't get our five cents, we'll tell them to get out," DeGuglielmo said...

Author: By Nancy H. Davis, | Title: Council Approves Private Pickup Of City Garbage | 7/7/1967 | See Source »

...production played with what-the-hell flamboyance. Timothy S. Mayer (the Devil's advocate) swept about the stage in a huge blue cape. He was as foxy as a Hollywood villain, as haughty as a Jacobean king. He relished his pronouncements like a small boy relishes his lemon drops. The worst actors stumbled towards self-effacement; Michael Boak (Sanitonella) became no more than an occasional buzz...

Author: By Joel Demott, | Title: The Devil's Law Case | 4/17/1967 | See Source »

...Jean-Paul Rappeneau, 33, has an appetite for the absurd and an unerring eye for casting. An actor in the mugging tradition of Toto and Fernandel, Philippe Noiret is excellent as the pawky, paunchy husband; and Catherine Deneuve, as his restless wife, is as light and tart as a lemon soufflé. They and their fellow farceurs prove that in the right hands the flip side of war and the flop side of marriage can still be made fresh and funny...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The Flip Side of War | 4/7/1967 | See Source »

...semi-rural Florida, east of Tampa, large amounts of fluorides emitted from phosphate plants have rained down on nearby citrus groves, ranches and gladiolus farms. Orange and lemon trees that absorbed the fluorides produced smaller yields, and gladioli turned brown and died. A national air-pollution symposium reported that cattle grazing on grass that was contaminated with the fluorides developed uneven teeth that hindered chewing and joints so swollen that many of the animals could not stand. Fluorides have also etched windowpanes, giving them the frosted appearance of a light bulb...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ecology: Menace in the Skies | 1/27/1967 | See Source »

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