Word: wonder
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Nobody says it's easy at this time of life. But I wonder if it isn't easier than living in the kind of tomb that too many lives are. Nobody ever reached a difficult goal by saying, "But what if . . ." Take a look at the chronicles of history and see how many "trapped" men emerged as brilliant contributors to their times after 40 years of killing unfulfillment...
...billed as a remedy for everything from arthritis to athlete's foot (TIME, Sept. 17, 1965). It developed that Dr. Kligman and his labs were investigating new drugs for no fewer than 33 manufacturers, and the FDA's Dr. Frances O. Kelsey, of thalidomide fame, began to wonder how thoroughly and carefully Kligman & Co. could do all that work. A check of the DMSO study showed that Dr. Kligman reported tests on three groups of prison volunteers, but prison records turned up only two groups. In the Kligman report, these tests ran for 24 and 26 weeks...
Tough luck for Moscow, Leningrad and Alma-Ata. What swingers there will miss-and those in the provinces will hear-is a propulsive, inventive brand of piano that has been the wonder of the jazz world for nearly 40 years. In Russia, as everywhere, Hines has been playing with a gusto born of assurance. His left hand minds the shop while his right frolics on a freewheeling holiday. Eyes squinched in concentration, his yard-wide smile flashing like neon, he launches into daring improvisational flights that, however farflung, somehow always resolve themselves into patterns as precise and neatly interlocked...
That golden heyday is gone. Though the ponies still run in August, the casinos were shuttered by law in 1950, and the noisome waters of Saratoga's springs - once sipped for everything from dropsy to hangovers - have been washed out by wonder drugs. Yet Saratoga is awakening, to a different kind of tune. It lies in the midst of tfie finest concentration of first-rate music and dance festivals in the U.S., if not the world. In the summer, more and more of the major U.S. symphony orchestras and dance companies are packing their tubas and tutus, fleeing...
...about the crush of crowds in California's Yosemite Valley. That was in 1870, when Yosemite counted its annual visitors in the thousands. This year 1,700,000 people are expected to come geysering into the national park, and the overcrowding is becoming so severe that many will wonder why they ever left home...