Word: dad
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...reassured to learn that "Father Joe Kennedy agrees" with Son Jack's appointment of Brother Bobby [as U.S. Attorney General]. What's good for Dad is good for the country, what...
...sound like hell, but you've got to go on." He admits he is a poor pilot, points to this as proof that anyone can fly a Piper. He flew his own plane until four years ago. when, says Piper, "My son finally said to me, 'Dad, wouldn't it make a hell of an advertisement for Piper Aircraft if you cracked up?' So I decided to quit...
Schreiber, in explaining the philosophy behind the Project, often enjoys telling one particular anecdote. "It's a story Sam Levenson sometimes tells. It seems that one day his brother goes up to his father and says 'Dad, I want to go to college.' So the old man stops for a minute and he looks at him and he says 'So who's stopping you.' That's the attitude we'd like the parents of our kids to take. We'd like them to say 'Don't worry about it, son, we'll get yourself through somehow...
...President. Replied the new papa, commonsensibly: "I haven't thought about it. I just want for him to be all right." After visiting the baby with his father, Millionaire Joe Kennedy, the Pres ident-elect revealed that "we finally decided who the baby looks like. He looks like Dad." Who decided that? Replied Jack: "Dad...
Theatrical groups centered in the Houses were responsible for 14 productions. Top honors go to Adams House for its two notable offerings. It presented in Agassiz the brilliant winning entry in its playwriting contest: Oh Dad, Poor Dad . . ., by Arthur L. Kopit '59, the most richly gifted playwriting talent to pass through Harvard since Barry in the early 'twenties. Well directed by Michael B. Ritchie '60, with fine acting by Jacqueline French (when she could be heard) and F. Rollins Maxwell '62, the production drew packed from near and far; the script has ready been published, and the will receive...