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TOLEDO. Spanish Chef Francisco Gon zalez from Madrid's Jockey Club turns out fine food (sea bass in parchment, tournedos, partridges with grapes of Almeria). Like the rest of the Spanish pavilion, the decor is elegant, and there is a small armada of trim, bolero-jacketed waiters. $5-$25. The pavilion's No. 2 restaurant, the Granada, serves an all-Spanish menu that features cold gazpacho soup, paella, sangria (red wine with soda) at slightly lower prices than the Toledo...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New York Fair: Jul. 3, 1964 | 7/3/1964 | See Source »

...Jolliffe started the Anti-Coronary Club, with 700 men aged 40 to 59 pledged to cut their fats to 30% or less of total calories, to trim off all visible fat from meats such as beef and lamb, and to use whole milk, butter, pastries, cheese and creamy desserts only as treats on special occasions. After seven years, there is no doubt that Anti-Coronary members have lower blood-cholesterol levels than before, and evidence is piling up that they have won considerable immunity to heart attacks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cardiology: Four Fats in the Blood: Which Cause Heart Attacks? | 6/19/1964 | See Source »

...broad, cobblestone boulevard stands a cluster of trim modern apartments; at the other rises a glass-and-steel office building. In between lies "the Raper"-Europe's greatest and gaudiest fleshpot. The Reeperbahn of Hamburg's Sankt Pauli district strings more sin along its garishly lighted main drag and crooked side streets than ten Tijuanas or 16 Sohos...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: West Germany: Reform Along the Raper | 6/12/1964 | See Source »

...lives in a Scarsdale mansion in stead of a London flat, and never ever packs a shoulder-bolstered Walther PPK automatic. But there is more than a soupçon of the fictional counterspy in trim, urbane Nicholas Deak, who is the James Bond of the world of money...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Money: The World of Deaknick | 6/12/1964 | See Source »

...League of Nations. A naturalized American, he spent World War II as an OSS agent parachuting into Burmese jungles to search for Japanese prisoners. On a postwar assignment, he sneaked Hungarian boxcars past the Russian occupiers to help rebuild West Germany's railways. Deak still keeps in OSS trim with a vegetarian diet, daily sprints around his own suburban running track, and ski trips with his Viennese wife. From a paneled office (cable address: Deaknick) overlooking lower Manhattan harbor, he supervises more than 100 agents working for Deak & Co., one of the world's biggest dealers in foreign...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Money: The World of Deaknick | 6/12/1964 | See Source »

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