Word: missing
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Dates: during 1970-1970
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...donkey (German) named Shane, a rabbit named Transit, a horse named Greeley, a sparrow called Agnew, an asp named Pidistra, an aardvark called A-million-miles-for-one-of-your-smiles. Also, reversing the order, a rat named Frank Lloyd, a collie named Melon, a pair of egrets called Miss Otis. Any more of that from the Caen guru, and his readers will all be like a raven named Stark...
...city dweller, chewing tobacco is that atavistic lump in a baseball player's cheek. In Raleigh, Miss. (pop. 614), site of the National Tobacco Spitting Contest, it is sport and sociology, an art actively practiced and boasted about. Champions are finally selected, as they should be, in a tournament that feeds the folklore for another year. TIME Correspondent Peter Range joined the aficionados for the 16th annual national spit-off and sent this report...
...British father has the sole authority to decide on the children's religious upbringing and education, which the wife can challenge only in the courts. In case of a divorce, British women often have no right to property acquired during marriage. This spring, Lib ladies picketed the Miss World Contest with signs reading MISUSED, MISCONCEPTION and MISGUIDED. Later they plastered lingerie ads with stickers saying "You earn more as a real whore...
...need communist ideas to win." Miss Bunke said. "We must replace the dictatorship of the bosses with the dictatorship of the workers and build socialism...
Rags' rock overtones reflect its origins. Publisher Wolman, a freelance San Francisco photographer, is one of the creators of the rock-oriented bi-weekly Rolling Stone. In fact, after Miss Peacock, Contributing Editor Daphne Davis and Columnist Blair Sabol approached him with the idea for a new fashion journal, Wolman tapped several Rolling Stone investors to launch Rags for $54,000. Printed in San Francisco, the first two issues sold 50,000 copies each, mostly through newsstands in California and New York, and August circulation climbed to 60,000. Thanks to a spare budget of $16,000 an issue...