Word: reopenings
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...tried to continue his experiments near Acapulco, Mexico, where he opened a sort of Hallucination Hilton in an old resort hotel. He offered to expand consciousnesses at the rate of $200 a month and $6 per expansion; the Mexican government expelled him after two months. He tried unsuccessfully to reopen in the Caribbean, finally established something called the Castalia Foundation on a 3,000-acre estate in Millbrook, N.Y., near Vassar and Bennett colleges. Along the way, he had become very much a religious mystic; the four-story foundation headquarters was filled with religious statues, yoga exercisers and Leary followers...
When thieves in Atlanta climb telephone poles to steal $5,000 worth of copper wire and when the government of Yugoslavia decides to reopen a copper mine that has been idle since the Middle Ages, it is a pretty good indication that there is a worldwide shortage of the metal. It was in recognition of that shortage that the U.S. Department of Commerce, trying to make sure that sufficient copper is available for Viet Nam needs, this month began requiring domestic producers to set aside 10%, instead of 7%, of their monthly production for the use of defense contractors. Warning...
...have risen steadily, the price of gold has been pegged by the Government at $35 per oz. since 1934, creating a perpetual squeeze on profits. For three years during World War II, the Government suspended gold mining, transferred workers to vital war industries. Many owners simply decided not to reopen once the war was over; most of those who did soon went under...
...spokesman for the Selective Service board in Michigan, which has begun giving physicals to students who still hold II-S deferments, said yesterday that local boards have been instructed to reopen the classification of all seniors this spring. All graduates will be considered I-A, unless their academic records justify continued education...
...mundane job and has already surpassed the HCUA in political imagination. From the Masters, the Council has wrested midnight parietals on football Saturdays. This seems to have damped the councillors' fire on this issue, but a "yes" vote tomorrow would give next term's HUC a chance to reopen the discussion. The Council has distinguished itself with many minor, but helpful, achievements: It ensured that interhouse dining at Radcliffe would indeed be free, published an informative booklet on the draft, began to formalize student contacts with the Overseers Visiting Committees, consulted with the Coop to improve the textbook department...