Word: marlis
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...unless we've been reading the papers," adds W.E. Buckmaster, a longtime resident. Indeed, Nixon has only been in San Clemente proper twice. Once, when he and Bebe Rebozo were driving in the President's white Continental, they stopped off at Taylor's Pharmacy on Del Mar Avenue so that the Chief could buy a box of Russell Stover candy for Pat. Another time, the two dropped into the Bay Cities Ace Hardware Store, where Nixon bought three beach balls...
...developed to plug a more famous low-priced product. D.D.B. hopes to establish Snark as "the Volkswagen of the sea." The agency also owns a 20% interest in Georg Jensen, an elegant Manhattan houseware and silver store; last year D.D.B. agreed to buy a small ice cream producer, Frose-Mar Corp., but the deal later fell through. "We will continue to diversify," says Senior Vice President James Madden, who has examined 300 potential acquisitions during the past six months...
Cooling It. Such minuses were not allowed to mar the fact of the President's extraordinary appearance on television. To sit down with Eric Sevareid of CBS, John Chancellor of NBC and Howard K. Smith of ABC, and plumb live the intricacies of foreign policy for an hour, bespoke presidential confidence -and courage. No tape editor could erase a presidential slip that might occur on the special set at a KABC studio in Hollywood, where the temperature had been lowered on request to 59° before air time. When the red lights of the TV cameras winked...
...John Gleason's lighting could be improved. When Judith arrives at the Dudgeon farm-house, it is morning; yet when the door is opened, we look through it into pitch darkness. And I find the too obvious use of follow-spotlights somewhat irritating. But such tiny blemishes cannot seriously mar what is from start to finish a thoroughly enjoyable show. The Festival is giving us a major production of a minor work...
...campaign's closing week, the Harris poll showed Labor's winning mar gin declining from 7% to 2%, but the Gallup and Marplan polls both showed a continued rise in Labor's edge. Only one sampling, which was conducted by the Opinion Research Center poll, predicted a Tory victory ? but only by a bare margin of 1%. Heath shrugged off all the surveys, insisting that the To ries would win. "The only poll that counts is the one on June 18," he said...