Word: nicely
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Regrettable" but Nice. In the course of revising the G.N.P., the Government's men made some other fascinating discoveries. One of them illustrates the vital role that increased consumer spending has had in the current economic advance; it shows, in fact, that consumer spending has risen faster than consumer income. The Government statisticians discovered that the consumer is spending more and saving less than anyone had thought, paying out 940 or 950 of each dollar instead of the 930 everyone had calculated. The difference alone means that in 1964 consumers spent $11.7 billion more than figured−an amount...
Next it is Charlotte and her husband Pierre, an airplane pilot who has just flown in from Germany with a noted reporter. Pierre invites the fellow to the house. At dinner, Charlotte and Pierre go through domestic cliches for the newsman's benefit: the cute house, the nice neighborhood, the exceptional TV set. Afterwards everyone has a monologue−Pierre on the importance of memory, Charlotte on the importance of living in the present, the journalist on the importance of intelligence. Then Charlotte and Pierre go to bed and run through the predictably tedious anatomical rituals and the same...
Otherwise, the play a success Marcel, played quietly but will considerable power by Albert Harris, reveals himself as a true artist. Their trio's faith is justify and Dixon regains "that old feeling--the It's a nice ending and if you want to believe it, you won't have much trouble...
...road to suicide because of sibling rivalry with a twin brother. The town's most dynamic executive, David Schuster, was feeling trapped at the office and in a sick second marriage that was turning his lovely, congenitally deaf daughter into a willful mute. And even the last nice teen-age girl in town, Allison MacKenzie (Mia Farrow), was at 18 facing Life: Schuster, she learned, was interested in her for more than her baby-sitting services. "Basically Moral." But Monash sees "nothing offensive" in such plotting. "Why don't our critics," he asks, "count up what happens...
...large, but this rarely happens. Many students come to the Summer School to get rid of a requirement and would like to hear some of the outstanding lecturers who are here--not to audit all their lectures, but to drop by once in awhile. It would be nice of the Summer School to let us do this without paying $15 or $60 for the privilege. Edward J. Leonard