Word: thank-you
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...nice enough, but she is also a product of the society which Antoine spent his youth trying to outwit. He treats Christine badly in this film, but it is a haphazard cruelty; he picks fights with her over everything from the newly born baby's name to the thank-you letter he must write to the Senator who arranged the installation of their telephone. Antoine is destructive in all this bickering, as well as in his affair, but it is hard to condemn him for it. There is no enthusiasm to his indecencies; rather, it is just the desperate, almost...
...reads one of several thank-you notes that President Richard Nixon has written to Francis M. ("Jack") Flynn, publisher of New York's hardhatted morning tabloid, the Daily News. It is not a new correspondence; Nixon also wrote to the News when he was Vice President and later, when he was out of office trying to get back in. (In those days the letters were signed "Dick.") So it was no big surprise when the President dropped by the News offices in Manhattan last week for a friendly chat with Flynn and his top editors. No wonder, either, that...
...greater advances than their white classmates. As he sees it, the project constitutes "a substantial refutation of the idea that black kids are inferior by their heritage, and therefore nothing can be done for them." Every bit as enthusiastic, many students used their newly acquired words to write glowing thank-you notes to Kottmeyer. Excerpts...
...Prince Charles fluffed a line and adlibbed: "What the hell comes next?" With that, he got one of the evening's biggest laughs. . . . The boy's hobby was stamp collecting, and who should help him with his hobby but President Franklin D. Roosevelt. That called for a thank-you note. Last week it was discovered among the President's papers: . . . Clairvoyant Maurice Woodruff makes the following predictions in the current McCall's: Jackie Onassis will have a son this year, but her marriage "won't last more than another year and a half...
...capita than any other nation-but it is surprising that anyone remembers. The man with the long memory is none other than Prince Bernhard, 55, at whose suggestion 60 Dutch companies, organizations, trade unions and individuals have contributed $200,000 for what Bernhard calls "Holland's modest thank-you"-an endowed chair in The Netherlands civilization at Harvard, where Secretary of State George C. Marshall first announced the Plan 20 years ago. Called "the Erasmus Lectorship," the chair will be filled each year by a visiting Dutch professor, beginning next fall with Art Historian Frans Q. Van Regteren Altena...