Word: riche
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...biggest quarter-horse race of all is the annual Ail-American Futurity at Ruidoso Downs, N. Mex. Come Labor Day, some 10,000 bona fide and drugstore cowboys-along with doctors, lawyers and oil-rich Indian chiefs-will turn out to see the tenth running of the 400-yard event billed as the "World's Richest Horse Race." Prize money for this year's Futurity is $615,000, nearly four times the size of the purse offered at the Kentucky Derby...
...running at least 50% below normal. But tomatoes were far and away the biggest casualties. California tomatoes intended for Campbell cans withered on the vine. Ohio patches went unpicked, and migrant workers hungrily moved on. Around Campbell's tomato-red brick home plant in Camden, N.J., the rich blaze of overripe fruit faded as mold crawled across the humid fields...
Last week Foote, Cone came down with a crash. After a brusque meeting with the ad company's officers, TWA announced that it was shifting its account to the much publicized, two-year-old Manhattan agency of Wells, Rich, Greene. Admen were stunned. For one thing, Wells, Rich, Greene had not even participated in last summer's drag-out battle for the TWA billings. Moreover, only nine months ago, blonde, fortyish Mary Wells, the agency's president and cofounder, married Harding Lawrence, chairman of Braniff Airways, whose $6,500,000 account had taken her struggling outfit...
...sooner had TWA announced its shift than Braniff announced that it was pulling out of Wells, Rich, Greene. Reportedly, Ling-Temco-Vought, the Dallas conglomerate that took Braniff under its corporate wing last January, had long been leary of the Braniff relationship with Wells, Rich, Greene, and was pressing for just such a change...
...themselves. This crusade is much in evidence in Pearson's first novel. The Senator, written with an assist from Novelist Gerald Green (The Last Angry Man), to be published this month. Its hero-villain is a walking compendium of all the sins that Pearson sees committed in Congress. Rich enough to begin with (a construction magnate worth at least $150 million), the hero is a willing and corrupt tool of Conglomerate, a group of large corporations that plan to exploit national lands for their own interest. He expects to become Conglomerate's chairman, and is obviously a bigger...