Word: arnolds
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Eugene Arnold, an M. I. T. graduate student, said he hopes to join other tenants in making a test case of today's court decision. "The rent on my two-room apartment has risen from $105 to $210 since March," Arnold said last night...
Ringo in Nashville? The idea seems as logical as Mick Jagger at Glyndebourne. In truth, Ringo poses no immediate threat to such country greats as Eddy Arnold or Johnny Cash. Yet his straightforward, unadorned singing style-customarily sure death in the quasi-Baroque world of rock-turns out to be just the thing for the classic country songs devoted to simple words, gentle irony and love gone haywire. In a song called Silent Homecoming, Ringo does emulate deep-throated Cash a bit too much. His baritone is occasionally too beery. But his cornhusky mastery of the album's title...
Died. Gordon Arnold Lonsdale (born Konan T. Molody), 48, convicted Soviet spy, whom the British exchanged for Businessman Greville Wynne in 1964; of an apparent heart attack in a Moscow suburb. Arrested in 1961 while posing as a Canadian businessman in London, Lonsdale was identified as the chief of operations of a spy ring in Britain. In 1965 he wrote a book, Spy, in which he bragged that he was also a communications aide for Colonel Rudolf Abel's famed ring in the U.S. during the 1950s...
...College Discovery staffers are now convinced that their efforts have dramatically changed the several thousand students who have already entered the programs. When SEEK produced its first four college graduates last winter, two were cum laude and all were headed for graduate school, including a remarkable hustler turned scholar, Arnold Kemp (see box opposite). By the time of the campus eruptions last year, the question for Bowker was whether the university could expand SEEK still further...
...Arnold Kemp was a veteran of the Harlem streets; he had already finished seven years in state prison for armed robbery. Last week, holder of three fellowships, he was studying at Harvard for a Ph.D. His poems have appeared in an anthology of young black poets; his first novel is in the hands of a publisher; he is well on the way to teaching English to ghetto kids. For all this, Kemp mainly credits City University's SEEK, program. "I probably would have written a book without it, but to be at Harvard? To teach later on? Never...