Word: winterers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...York has acquired some valuable talent over the winter, and could place as high as third. Jacques Plante, MVP two years ago, takes over for goalie Gump Worsley. Donnie Marshall and Phil Goyette at center ice, along with Val Fonteyne, one of the league's top penalty killers, will fill handsomely two former Ranger gaps. Right wing Andy Bathgate, among the league's top scorers for the last eight years, will miss left wing Dean Prentice, who is now a Bruin. However, he should team up well with Goyette as his center. If Camille Henry can continue to score goals...
...Hearst management claimed that the Mirror was a victim of last winter's prolonged newspaper strike. Actually, the owners had been looking for an excuse to close down the paper for years, and the strike simply came along at a useful moment. In the past three years the rapidly fading Hearst empire has had a hand in the deaths of half a dozen large dailies, including the Boston Evening American and the Los Angeles Examiner...
...Alte wasted no time on Wehmut, the sweet melancholy that Germans usually lavish on such occasions. Instead, he launched into a withering attack on President Kennedy's proposal to sell wheat to Russia, calling it a fickle expedient that was inconsistent with Washington's demand last winter that West German in dustrialists cancel a deal to sell pipeline to Moscow. Demanding that the entire subject of East-West trade be reviewed by the NATO Council, Adenauer insisted that the wheat would ultimately help the Russians fight the West, and he echoed a crack he had made...
...picture of a wife killer from the town of Langenthal. When the man, gratified by this unaccustomed publicity, turned himself in to Blick, the paper printed his story-to the stern disapproval of the rest of the press. Moved by impulses totally alien to the competition, Blick last winter invited 40 needy children from West Berlin to ski in Valais-and picked up the tab. It asked readers for money to buy beds for aged and improvident Swiss. When readers responded generously, other papers blew their Pfiffe. It was not seemly, they said, to admit the existence of poverty...
...travel to Castro; it suits him better than it does us. The restrictions on travel to Cuba should be withdrawn as a thoroughly unnecessary limit on the freedom of American citizens. And they should be withdrawn soon: the students who organized the last trip plan a second one this winter on a much larger scale. The resulting publicity will stimulate Congressional pressure which could make a change in policy politically impossible...