Word: res
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...ranking politicians, raises championship horses, is a good skier and a devoted golfer. With his handsome wife, he is ready to try the latest dances, from the twist to the hully gully. Most of all, he is dedicated to enlarging the fortunes of his bank, de Rothschild Frères (which is known to competitors as La Grande Dame des Banques Privées), and to forging the two family branches closer together. Says Guy: "Our relations are confident, cooperative and affectionate. There are going to be more things to do together...
Some club members have reportedly asked Louis Beer '65, to res for the post, but few anticipate that Ross will be defeated...
...street to Macy's third floor. The big companies are forcing the whole industry in their direction. They have already moved into double-knit garments and to new laminated materials; the latest shift is to the new stretch fabrics that started with ski pants, expanded into brassières and girdles, and will eventually pop up in almost everything women wear. "It used to be," says Russ Togs President Eli Rousso, "that a salesman's personality was what counted most in selling. But no more. Nowadays, this is an industry of facts and figures...
...trend is Prisunic (One-Price), the Continent's largest retail chain and a sort of bouillabaisse of the U.S. five-and-dime store, the discount house and the supermarket. In Prisunic's 304 stores, shoppers avidly fill their carts with blue jeans and brassières, meat and mushrooms, toys and tools-while canned music wafts across crowded aisles, pretty girls demonstrate how to cook frozen foods, and cash registers tinkle at busy check-out counters...
...piece of bread represents the ne, the filling the the bottom piece of bread the pas. Remember the sandwich." chirps Dawn reminding the viewer to use ne and pas and keep them apart. To teach the French possessive RTF uses a song-and-mime team called the Frères Jacques, who pretend to be burglars tirelessly dividing loot à moi; à toi, à toi, à lui, until even a Kansas City house dick would get the idea. Hachette teaches the future tense in a setting where any other tense would be out of place: a fortuneteller's booth...