Word: page
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...education bill seeks simply to provide the school construction and facilities that state and local governments have been unable-or unwilling-to furnish. The medicare bill (see box, next page) will relieve older citizens of the worry of spending their savings on medical bills, thereby add to their general purchasing proclivities, inspire consumer-spending and drive another nail into the coffin of cyclical depression...
...Americans who are deeply opposed to the U.S. bombing raids against the people of the D.R.V. We are doing what we can to stop these barbarous attacks. You have our respect and sympathy." Twenty-five hundred clergymen took a full-page advertisement in the New York Times to demand of the President, "In the Name of God, STOP IT!" A group called Women Strike for Peace mounted a widespread get-out-of-Viet Nam campaign. A student at the University of Michigan collected money to buy medical supplies for the Viet Cong...
Furrowed Brow. Of all the newcomers, Peanuts, which arrived on the comics page 15 years ago, is by far the most appealing. And Charlie Brown, the principal Peanut, is a likely candidate for most popular kid in the country. With the merest wisp of hair and a perpetually furrowed brow, Charlie gazes blankly on a world that is far too ferocious for him. Each strip is usually a lesson, complete in itself, on the futility of good intentions. "Believe in me," Charlie cries, but no one pays any attention. When he calls to apologize for being late to a party...
...find room for it. Called Li'I Folks, the panel included some forerunners of Peanuts, but it was doomed. After turning it out for nearly a year, Sparky asked the editor for more money. His answer: "No." Then how about giving it a regular spot on the comics page? "No." Then maybe Schulz should stop drawing it altogether? Said the editor: "O.K., let's drop...
...Crest, P.&G.'s top-selling fluoridated toothpaste ("My group had 34% fewer cavities with . . ."). Then, for reasons of his own, he quit P & G last July for a Chicago food flavoring firm. With him he took a memento of his work at P. &G.: a 188-page copy of the 1965 marketing plans for Crest, which P&G estimated was worth $1,000,000 to its competitors...