Word: starting
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...forces. In Berlin, demonstrating Free University students have clashed violently with police five times. At rallies, "Red Rudi" Dutschke reads telegrams of support from the Viet Cong. Rectors at Hamburg and Munich have been shouted down by students. "Our universities are dead," concedes one government education official. "We must start from zero...
...start of this season, though, Chamberlain carried his selfless one-for-all tactics from the sublime to the ridiculous. He continued to set up plays and engulf the backboards. But presumably on the theory that the less he scored, the better Philadelphia fared, Wilt hardly went for the basket at all. In his first 16 games, he averaged only 15 points. Against the Warriors last month he scored exactly one point-on a foul shot-and did not so much as attempt a field goal in the entire game...
...politics and economics at Oxford, then another five months passed while he served out his military duty in the U.S. Air Force Reserve. Two weeks ago, the man who ranks as one of the game's all-time college greats finally reported to the New York Knickerbockers to start work on his four-year, $500,000 contract. From the way the fans reacted, he might have been Bob Cousy, Oscar Robertson and Wilt Chamberlain all rolled into one. In Bradley's first two home games, 30,000 fans (twice the usual number) jammed Madison Square Garden to cheer...
...start has been made toward providing legal services for the poor. The rich have always had the best lawyers. But what of the middle class, faced with fees that often place good legal help all but out of reach? An important answer could be group legal services-the services of a lawyer offered by an organization to members at a reduced rate or for free. Trouble is that such services violate the codes of ethics of the American Bar Association and the bars of most states...
Longer Work Week. With disposable personal income at an alltime high, the odds seem good that people will start spending more and saving less. In recent months, uncertainty over inflation, the Viet Nam war and the possibility of a federal tax increase have prompted consumers to salt away an abnormally high 7% of their disposable income savings. They also have been taking extra pains to stay out of debt; installment credit is expected to grow by only $3.5 billion in 1967 v. $6 billion last year. While such thriftiness has hurt sales up to now, it means over the long...