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...Married. Conrad Nicholson Hilton Jr., 32, a vice president of the Hilton Hotels Corp., son of Hotelman Conrad Hilton; and Patricia Blake McClintock, 18, daughter of Tulsa Millionaire (oil, banking) Frank Grant McClintock and Manhattan Socialite Mrs. William Horace Schmidlapp; she for the first time, he for the second (No. 1: Hollywood's Elizabeth Taylor); in Manhattan's Plaza Hotel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Dec. 8, 1958 | 12/8/1958 | See Source »

Pursuit (CBS, 8-9 p.m.).* John Cassavetes and E. G. Marshall, as a couple of Internal Revenue sleuths examining the double-entry bookkeeping of greedy Industrialist Conrad Nagel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Listings: Time Listings, Dec. 8, 1958 | 12/8/1958 | See Source »

...Barnaby Conrad, whose film it is, does manage to fit in batches of pictures. He has done a good editing job, switching from angle to angle, or from long-shot to close-up at the right speed--enough time for a good look, but fast enough to impute action...

Author: By David M. Farquhar, | Title: The Death of Manolete | 12/8/1958 | See Source »

...Days of Wine and Roses) Miller. "I just couldn't stand it." ¶ The critics were too rough, flailed original dramas more harshly than run-of-the-hoof westerns. Robert Alan Arthur (Man on a Mountain Top) denounced "an incredibly brutal dismissal" of a recent production of Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness by the New York Times's J. P. Shanley: "I think this bum thinks he's still writing obituaries ... It will be a long time before another show of this kind is done...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TELEVISION: The Disgruntled Cadillacs | 11/24/1958 | See Source »

...Republic contracted the most visible case of split personality. Critic Conrad Brenner extolled the book for four pages, ended: "Vladimir Nabokov is an artist of the first rank, a writer in the great tradition . . . Lolita is probably the best fiction to come out of this country . . . since Faulkner's burst in the '30s. [Nabokov] may be the most important writer now going in this country." But later, the New Republic used a lead editorial to call Lolita an "obscene chronicle of murder and a child's destruction," somberly explained "what obliges us to differ with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Lolita Case | 11/17/1958 | See Source »

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