Word: tots
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...emergency session and ordered the imposition of the antiriot law, which provides penalties of up to ten years in jail. Previously, rioters had been charged only with misdemeanors, which are punishable by small fines. By 2 a.m., the riot police had cleared the station and the square. They could tot up damages of close to $1,000,000, with 140 persons hospitalized, including 61 police, and over 700 in jail...
...Juan Drum and Bugle Corps, made up of a series of complicated major and minor leagues designed to involve every child under eighteen in the most noisy and enthusiastic if not the best musical enterprise in the city. To keep the mothers happy he has carved a series of tot lots out of vacant back-yards and old oil dumps, and to keep himself happy (and elected) he has established the Al Vellucci Associates who meet periodically to honor him at dinner...
...parts with characteristic skill, and Darieux, unlike the rest of the cast, does her own singing. Gene Kelly, his face frozen in its 1953 Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer grin, is wonderfully, incredibly, exciting to watch in action. Deneuve and Dorleac as twins ("toutes deux demoiselles, ayant eu des amants tres tot") reflect the joy with which Demy exercises the cinema's glorious potential to permanently trap on celluloid supremely magnificent women...
Fewer People, Better Paid. One reason they did is that, like their blue-chip clients, the big agencies have been able to take advantage of economies of size. "Bigness is really an asset," says Young & Rubicam President Stephen O. Frankfurt. All are using computers, which not only tot up possible profits but also give a broad idea of agency problems. With the help of the expensive computers, and with payrolls representing 70% of total expense, the agencies have been able to cut back on clerical help and thus reduce such other overhead as floor space. As a result, they have...
...typification of the TV tot, Video Boy was raised by an electronic baby sitter. The first word he uttered was "Colgate"; the first phrase he learned to read was "The End." When he puts on his raincoat, he becomes a secret agent. When his mother presses him to finish his carrots, he mutters "it's clobberin' time" just like The Thing. When Dad takes over the set to watch football, he and his sister play Dating Game with her dolls. He doesn't climb trees; he watches Tarzan do it. At three, he spends five hours...