Word: stick
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Britannia was Phillida Stone, an 18-year-old art student at Oxford whose father, Artist Reynolds Stone, was commissioned to design the new mauve, brown and blue fiver (worth $14). At a loss for a model, her father draped Phillida in a sheet, sat his daughter down with a stick in one hand to represent Britannia's spear. Her traditional olive branch was sketched in later. Some found the new design an agreeable change from the buxom figure on most other money. Other Britons thought Phillitannia "clumsily designed," "like Snow White" and "too much like a bathing beauty." Even...
Nobody feels sorry for the Black Hawks any more. Chicago always had good stick-men and shifty skaters. Pilous concentrated on teamwork and hard-checking, hard-skating conditioning. The Black Hawks are the only team in the league that regularly holds a workout on the day of a game. When they get on the ice, says Pilous, "they should be sharp and eager and ready to take a bite out of the puck." Pilous' approach has helped Left Wing Bobby Hull, 24, become one of the most explosive scorers in hockey history, with a record-tying 50 goals last...
...penalties in a game with the Detroit Red Wings against the Montreal Canadiens. The 25-year-old defense man, with 210 min. in the penalty box so far this season, easily surpassed the record of Montreal's Lou Fontinato (202 min.) by clobbering two Canadien players with his stick, lunging at the referee and finally bouncing his glove off the ref's head. Total fine for misconduct: $100, plus a three-game suspension without...
...chalet dwellers (most of whom maintain at least one other home base, ranging in location and social prestige from the Riviera to Florida), Gstaad harbors a large class of doting parents who, having shipped off their children to nearby prep schools such as Le Rosey and Montesano, like to stick around within visiting distance for a term...
Coterie to Custom. Every generation is convinced that manners are not what they once were and still should be; complaints about today's young people-who adamantly stick to their seats on buses and trains while sick old ladies lurch about on their feet-make up a good part of almost any dinner conversation. To Amy Vanderbilt, there is no fighting the inevitable and growing relaxation, nor should there be. Manners, says Amy, are largely a matter of custom: "In generations past, a small coterie of so-called society people set our manners. Most of today's fashion...