Word: sid
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When his former stars, Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca, decided to do their own shows this season, Liebman kept on for the spectaculars the veteran technical staff that had run Your Show of Shows for more than five years: a permanent group of 16 dancers and twelve singers, and such top professionals as Scene Designer Frederick Fox, Costume Designer Paul Du-Pont, Music Director Charles Sanford and Associate Producer Bill Hobin. With this well-coordinated team, Liebman has landed eight of his twelve color spectaculars in the Nielsen top ten TV shows...
...decision over Ed Amerantes for the varsity's only win below the 167 class. Bob Gilmor (167) pinned champion Bill Bock after 8:30 with a half Nelson body press in the best match of the day, and Captain Ken Culbert (177) took 3:15 to get Sid Hall into the reverse cradle...
...pluckily mentions Lux; Douglas Fairbanks Jr. and Adolphe Menjou smack their lips respectively over Rheingold and Schaefer beers; Jon Hall goes into ecstasies over Jay's potato chips; and Loretta Young apparently keeps a box of Tide on her grand piano. There are only a few holdouts, notably Sid Caesar who sticks strictly to his funny business...
Pisces. No theatre yet, but President Pusey will announce a special bequest for an undergraduate herbarium on De Wolfe Street near Dunster House "in line with our policy of emphasizing the College." In the entertainment world, a soft-drink company will attempt to inveigle Imogene Coca and Sid Caesar to reunite for a 4,000,000 dollar bonus, on the condition that Caesar drastically change his last name...
Such big rich Texas oilmen as Clint Murchison and Sid Richardson (TIME, May 24) have made their millions by a variation of the capital gain-the depletion allowance. Others have made their millions in a dozen different ways, helped by capital gains. They have built up old companies, formed new ones, invented new products or services and even entire new industries-all with profits (when and if they sell out) subject only to the capital-gains tax. Los Angeles' William Lear, for example, has built his Lear, Inc. into a $50 million company making automatic pilots and other electronic...