Word: sharing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Endikin and Reetchie" by Harvey Firari and "Cello Days at Dixon Place" by Michael Weller took an attentive and from a post-nuclear desert hell to the temporary break-up of an idyllic situation in the Village of three young men and the woman they idealistically share The one-act plays, both originals premiering at the Ex, are moderate successes, certainly up to what are now the fairly high standards...
...here the play loses much of its punch. I, for one, thought these kids might have a lesson in reality coming to them. When Tina, convincingly acted by Susan Schwarz, talks about her three men as aspects of "a single beautiful lover" who share her "without any jealousy" I found it hard to believe. These earnest young people were so good hearted that I began to doubt them...
...Bravo, as well as Kindler's elaborate printing plant near Munich. Though Springer, who now publishes five big dailies, denies he has any intention of entering the illustrated magazine field, rumors abound that he has formed a secret holding company with Quick, and that he has a controlling share in the company. "It's about time to blow the whistle on Springer's megalomania," says one fretful illustrated publisher with typical illustrated hyperbole. "This is a danger to democracy...
...least as seen in stereotype. They are not given to the long hair, bulging book bags and breathless brilliance found at Radcliffe. They lack the Junior-League-socialite attitude of Smith. Vassar's ear nest, do-gooder zeal eludes them; nor do they share the compulsive egalitarianism of Barnard students. They are neither so muscularly athletic as the Bryn Mawr girls nor quite so country-sweet as the Mount Holyoke lasses. Their distinguishing characteristic, in short, is that they don't stand out. They tend simply to be wholesome girls who make normal, well-adjusted housewives and civic...
...pure nonsense" that is written about market trends. The heart of the problem, said the magazine, is the "tremendous disparity" between point changes in the Dow-Jones average and the dollars-and-cents meaning of those changes. The Dow-Jones index is calculated by totaling the per-share value of 30 blue-chip industrial stocks (among them: A.T. &T., Du Pont, General Motors, General Electric, U.S. Steel), then dividing the sum by a frequently changed divisor-now 2.278-to erase the effect of stock splits and dividends. Thus figured, the Dow-Jones average of those 30 stocks stood...