Word: reappearance
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...young star, Coach Cooney Weiland threw Diercks on the ice for the final minutes. With no chance to warm up or get emotionally prepared, Diercks let in three goals on four shots. It may be coincidential, but the mystique that was building around Diercks has yet to reappear...
...return engagement for that outstanding special, first shown in October: Robert Goulet, Peter Falk, Sally Ann Howes, Edward Villella doing Lerner and Loewe's fairy tale about a Scottish village that comes to life once every century. And may all good programs reappear every 100 days...
...Czechoslovakia were expropriated, Liechtenstein's publicity-shy ruler has been discreetly selling off his $150 million art inheritance, consisting of more than 1,500 paintings. Some 30 to 40 Rembrandts, Rubenses and other old masters have disappeared from the vaults of the royal castle at Vaduz only to reappear, with a minimum of publicity, on museum walls from Ottawa to London. Unquestionably the most valuable painting in the Prince's collection was the Leonardo Ginevra...
That most conspicuous waste-paper-is less serious than it looks. Paper that starts as office stationery may be reprocessed several times to reappear as wrapping or wallboard. Some 25% of all paper now derives from this "secondary forest," and there is so much reforestation that 60% more timber is maturing every year than is cut. A new process breaks up old cars into tiny bits and magnetically extracts the steel to produce a 97%-pure scrap, offering a hope that most of the nation's automobile graveyards can eventually be eliminated. Fly ash is converted to make lightweight...
...have some answers, some constructive ideas about the health care delivery system, the alternative may be pressure to create large numbers of doctors, and the modern version of the nineteenth century diploma mills may reappear," Ebert warned the Association of American Colleges on Saturday night. Ebert blamed the shortage of physicians on "the reluctance of medical schools to increase in size, and the expense of creating new medical schools" since they depend too heavily on funds ticketed for research...