Word: silver
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Banking Corp., Washington, $16,000; State Bank & Trust Co., Columbia, S.C., $25,000; National Bank of Washington, $28,000; Fidelity Investment Co., Washington, $40,600; the Small Business Administration, $54,400; District of Columbia National Bank, Washington, $135,000; American Security & Trust Co., Washington, $223,000; American National Bank, Silver Spring, Md., $262,000; First National Bank in Dallas, $471,000; Fidelity National Bank & Trust Co., Oklahoma City, $475,000; Fraternity Federal Savings & Loan Association, Baltimore, $746,000. In addition, Baker got loans totaling $275,000 from eight other institutions. Of the total, Drennan said, Baker's personal share...
...serious blue fedora, took off the velvet-collared overcoat with the laven der silk lining, and with well-manicured hands smoothed back a wisp of brown hair. His bright eyes stole briefly across the gathered crowd and looked away again. Then, clutching a black attache case imprinted with his silver initials, Robert Gene Baker, 36, the whizbang from Pickens, S.C., hurried into a hearing room in the old Senate Office Building...
President Johnson told a January news conference that he had received a $588 stereo as a personal gift from Baker. However, Don Reynolds, owner of a Silver Spring, Md., insurance agency in which Baker occasionally shared the profits, insisted before the committee that he was the donor. Reynolds said that the gift had been suggested by Baker as an appropriate gesture on Reynolds' part for writing a $100,000 policy on Johnson's life...
...whenever freezing temperatures threaten. Nelson Rockefeller steals moments at his hifi, sits fascinated by the Glenn Miller and Benny Goodman bands of the '30s. Dick Nixon thrills to the rough (but losing) play of New York's hockey Rangers. Maggie Smith sits with opera glasses in her Silver Spring, Md., apartment, spots sparrows, cardinals and titmice flitting among ten feeding stations and birdhouses. She sets out raisins, notes that "the mockingbird always takes two, four, never an odd number." Henry Cabot Lodge likes to walk in the Saigon zoo. With surprising delight, he tells how he once strolled...
...Powell, Red Garland, Bill Evans and Horace Silver all have had stronger influences than Monk's on jazz pianists. Monk's sound is so obviously his own that to imitate it would be as risky and embarrassing as affecting a Chinese accent when ordering chop suey. Besides, Monk is off in a bag all his own, and in the sleek, dry art that jazz threatens to become, that is the best thing about...