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...union was not perfect. Harry, Martin writes, had extended relationships with Jean Dalrymple, a Broadway producer and theatrical agent and (platonically, it seems) with Mary Bancroft, who, among other accomplishments, had been a wartime spy master for the OSS. Clare's lovers, according to the author, included financier Bernard Baruch, Sir Winston Churchill's son Randolph and others (as the saying goes) too numerous to mention. Martin portrays Harry as a reluctant adulterer, consumed with Presbyterian guilt, who sought from other women the kind of feminine solace Clare could not or would not give. Clare, by contrast, is limned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: When Harry Met Clare . . . | 8/26/1991 | See Source »

...going down to the wire," says Lucy Baruch, a spokesperson for the Center for the American Women in Politics at the Eagleton Instititute at Rutgers University...

Author: By Heather R. Mcleod, | Title: The Year Of the Woman? | 11/5/1990 | See Source »

Last week, more than 35 years later, the Swedish Academy awarded the Nobel Prize for Economics to Markowitz, a professor at the Baruch College of the City University of New York, and two colleagues who built upon his work. Sharing the honor were William Sharpe of Stanford University and Merton Miller of the University of Chicago...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ECONOMICS: Balancing Act | 10/29/1990 | See Source »

...veteran network basher who tried to take over CBS three years ago. "It's like AM radio. They weren't doing anything wrong either, but FM radio was better." Years of colossal audiences and soaring ad revenues, however, bred complacency. "The networks closed their eyes to reality," says Ralph Baruch, former president of Viacom International and now a senior fellow at the Gannett Center for Media Studies. "They didn't fully comprehend the extent of technological changes." Norman Lear, creator of All in the Family and now the owner of six independent TV stations, sees the networks' distress as retribution...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Video: The Big Boys' Blues | 10/17/1988 | See Source »

...free-spending arrogance are over. "Network television is a mature medium," says Grant Tinker, the former NBC chairman who now runs his own production company. "There is no more audience growth. The universe is what it is." In a survey of top advertisers, Eugene Secunda, professor of marketing at Baruch College in New York City, found that 53% would consider making a significant shift in their ad dollars if the three networks' share dropped to 65%. "You're dealing with inevitable decline," says Secunda. "It's like those folks who kidded themselves that the Roman Empire was going...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Video: The Big Boys' Blues | 10/17/1988 | See Source »

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