Word: winterers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...spend their profits on pleasure. Airlines fostered the boom by increasing the number of flights and decreasing fares (the lowest seasonal round-trip rate from New York to Jamaica is $44 less than last year's). The main reason for the boom, and perhaps the simplest, is that winter vacations to sunny climates have become more and more a vital part of American life...
...Russia's Igor Ter-Ovanesyan, 26: the broad jump at the Golden Gate Invitational track meet, beating the U.S.'s Ralph Boston in the rubber match of their winter duel; at San Francisco. In two previous meets, each had won once, and the total margin between them was ¼ in. This time Ter-Ovanesyan leaped 26 ft. 4 in., beat Boston...
Despite such success, Moreau can still go unnoticed in a crowd: her forlorn, equivocal beauty is not to be seen at a glance. At 37, she looks younger than she did at 30, but at 30 she was older than winter. Her lips point down in an inverted smile, her teeth end in saws like a child's, the color of her hair is indistinctly reddish-blondish-brown. Her eyes can be hopeful and occasionally serene, but they kindle smaller fires in the imagination than do the dark circles under them. There is desperation in her mouth, especially when...
Every college has to have "its" sport. And at Yale that sport is swimming. On Saturday afternoons throughout the winter, Yale's Payne Whitney Gymansium takes on the air of a massive temple into which the faithful file past long corridors of swimming trophies to watch the water animals perform...
Information on birth control should be made part of the curricula of high schools and colleges, Graham G. Blaine '40, Chief of Psychiatry to the University Health Service, says in an article in the winter issue of Mosaic, to be released today...