Outside came in '60. The Edge in '61. All three made Gold, but the biggest seller was Inside.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
We all have friends and loved ones who say 60's the new 30. No. Sixty's the new 60.
The first 12-string guitar I bought was probably around 1957.
The '60s had edge; the '70s had embroidery.
The most wonderful time to be in the art world was in the sixties, because it wasn't a business - there was no business of doing art.
A dapper Canadian in his mid-fifties, Rob McEwen bought the disparate collection of gold mining companies known as Goldcorp in 1989. A decade later, he'd unified those companies and was ready for expansion - a process he wanted to start by building a new refinery.
The price of gold was fixed at $35 an ounce in 1934, but by the time the U.S. got through the Korean War, the Vietnam war, with all the associated secular inflation, the price level had gone up nearly three times.
I was excited to turn 60.
When I was in the business as a young performer, it was a recognised fact that when you got to 60 you were out, because there'd be a new crop of comics coming up all the time, every 10 years or so.
I'm lucky that I was in retailing during the time that I call the golden age of retailing.
People talk about the '60s, but they were merely a mass production of what the '50s had begun.
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