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Hollywood really knows how to make a guy welcome. Barbra Streisand, Jack Lemmon, Steve Allen, Lucille Ball, Pierre Salinger, Gene Kelly, Kirk Douglas, Charlton Heston, Merle Oberon, Fred Astaire, Ava Gardner, Omar Sharif, Milton Berle, Danny Thomas, Mario Thomas, David Niven, Alan Jay Lerner, Donna Reed, Gregory Peck, Natalie Wood, Andy Williams, Tom Smothers, Don Adams and Shirley MacLaine-all of them, plus about 400 others, paid $250 per couple to do honor to Paris Couturier André Courrèges, 44, at a showing of his new collection in Los Angeles. Courreges could only assume that their presence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Nov. 24, 1967 | 11/24/1967 | See Source »

...relics and films about Jean Harlow. His audience ate it up. His touch of natural Southern rhetoric is quickly evident; he is somewhat oratorical even in conversation. His whole manner is flavored with an exuberant self-indulgence. The brashness in him comes out in his explosive literary cirticism: Milton is one of the "great stuffed goats of English literature...

Author: By Robert B. Shaw, | Title: James Dickey | 11/9/1967 | See Source »

...battlefields of Viet Nam to the wheat fields of the plains. The Michigander did not endear himself to Midwestern audiences by condemning collective bargaining for farmers and urging that they sell their commodities abroad "by the law of supply and demand"-which would mean at low world prices. Senator Milton Young of North Dakota, who had said earlier he would support Romney if nominated, commented: "He isn't nominated yet and judging from his farm statements in North Dakota, he never will be." Romney arrived in tree-scarce South Dakota saying how he had been looking forward to seeing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Politics: On the Road | 11/3/1967 | See Source »

...Norfolk & Western, however, last week's special court ruling did at least clear away some legal complications surrounding the link of the Pennsy and Central into the nation's biggest rail system. The court overruled protests by the city of Scranton, Pa., and unsuccessful Pennsylvania Gubernatorial Candidate Milton Shapp that the merger itself would be detrimental. And it left untouched an ar rangement under which the Penn Central, if the ICC approves, would first lend $25 million to the beleaguered New Haven to keep it going; the Penn Central would ultimately acquire the New Haven and maintain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Railroads: Getting Closer | 10/27/1967 | See Source »

Preplanned cities are big business for the English Government. Ten small towns are growing into old communities around London. Twelve new towns of 100,000 each are going up on the outskirts of Birmingham. Liverpool, Glasgow, and Edinburgh. Now, Milton Keynes, a city of 250,000, is on the Government's drawing boards...

Author: By Robert C. Pozen, | Title: British New Towns | 10/20/1967 | See Source »

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