Word: cunninghams
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Quality was the watchword of Paul Sachs, or "P.J.S.," as he was known. Recalls Chicago Director Cunningham: "He believed that when you put your money down for a French painting, it should be good enough to hang in the Louvre, a British painting good enough to hang in the National Gallery." And Sachs frankly believed in educating an elite. This was not so much a belief in art for the few but in art understood sufficiently by an elite to enable them to entice the many...
...Mother never cooked anything that wasn't in a can or a container, and all she had to do was warm it up," says exurban New York Matron Maria Cunningham, 31. Not Maria. Veal, lamb and chicken are her favorites, and she and her husband like Julia's recipes for saute de veau Marengo, gigot de pre-sale roti a la moutarde, and supreme de volatile aux champignons, which they served recently at a dinner for 22. Says Maria: "The only thing that made it possible is that Julia tells all the things you can do in advance...
Harvard was skippered by Tony Parker. The other crew members were Dan Burns, Kinnaird Howland, John Cunningham, Jim Notman, Doug MacDonald, Peter Robbins, and John Bullard...
...Iowa has been prodding the IRS and the Treasury Department for months, pleading with them to tap a source of revenue he estimates at $110 million yearly. The stalling, suggested Schmidhauser in a House speech, comes from senior bureaucrats' "unwillingness to step on powerful toes." Republican Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska made it a bipartisan fight. "This is no matter on which reasonable men can differ," said he. "It is now time for action...
Died. Richard Cunningham Patterson Jr., 80, New York's official city greeter from 1954 to 1965, a suave and dapper onetime mining engineer, business executive and U.S. Ambassador to Yugoslavia (1944-47), Guatemala (1948-51) and Switzerland (1951-53), who in 1954 was appointed "Chairman of the Mayor's Reception Committee of New York City," for the next twelve years glad-handed just about everyone, official or not, from hereditary kings to beauty queens and lumberjacks; in Manhattan...