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...18th and 19th century costume collection, broke lamps and sculpture, smeared his walls with paint. Wyeth refused to prosecute. Instead, he invited the vandals around for a talk, forgiving the eight who showed up last week when they apologized and promised to do what they could to repay the $2,000 worth of damage. "I am left feeling saddest," said Wyeth, "about the failure of us who are responsible in some way for these youths. They said they had nothing to do, and I believe so deeply in the preciousness of time and in the creative...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Dec. 4, 1964 | 12/4/1964 | See Source »

Though Wilson had been expected to scatter his appointments across the party's political spectrum and had a certain number of personal debts to repay, he went out of his way to give Labor's troublesome, hard-core left-wingers seats in the new government-including six in the Cabinet itself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Great Britain: Looking Left | 10/30/1964 | See Source »

...poem has got to be obscure, it should at least repay close analysis. Dawson's "The Pigeon Roof" does. It becomes evident, if one struggles with the disconnected sentences, that the narrator a) hates pigeons, b) once started a forest fire, c) had a friend who was a better poet who almost got killed when they were swimming in an irrigation ditch, but who recovered only to die on a golf course while the narrator was either on a hill behind a drive-in movie with a girl or on a barren shore, d) that the friend had started writing...

Author: By Harrison Young, | Title: Summer 'Advocate' | 10/30/1964 | See Source »

...York World's Fair was planned for profit. Remembering the ocean of red ink that engulfed New York's 1939-40 World of Tomorrow, the World's Fair of 1964-65 Corp. schemed and ballyhooed to make sure that the billion-dollar bazaar would not only repay every last penny it cost, but also would even show a $99 million surplus. New York City hotels, stores and restaurants also counted confidently on record profits from hordes of tourists attracted by the extravaganza in Flushing Meadow. By last week, well into the second half of its first season...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Fair, Leisure: What Can The Matter Be? | 8/21/1964 | See Source »

...increasing number of other purchases, are on installment plans. The American's personal debt is rising at the rate of $1 billion a month, now stands at $70.9 billion. One of every two families owes an installment debt, and 15% of monthly disposable income is earmarked to repay it. But in the aura of prosperity created by current economic news, few consumers worry about debts, partly because they feel protected by such social bulwarks as job security, unemployment insurance, social security and pension plans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Economy: The Life-Enriched Consumer | 8/7/1964 | See Source »

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