Word: dahling
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Effects." Criticism of CIA's financial involvement-however innocuous it may have been-came from every corner of the world. Dan Mclntosh, president of the Berkeley student body, cried that as a result of the N.S.A. affair, "the credibility of U.S. students abroad is greatly damaged." Robert A. Dahl, president of the American Political Science Association, said "there are bound to be evil effects" from CIA's money funnel. Even George Meany, whose A.F.L.-C.I.O. international affiliates had long been richly endowed by the espionage agency's foundations, self-right-eously proclaimed his "natural ingrained opposition...
Robert A. Dahl, professor in Yale's political science department, and Louis H. Pollak '43, dean of Yale Law School, were among the signers...
Yale's Professor Robert Dahl, in a study of New Haven politics, points out that a genuinely ethnic group remains seriously ethnic only so long as it remains proletarian. But the time comes when large segments of the group are assimilated into the "middling and upper strata ... and look to others in the middling strata for friends, associates and marriage partners. To these people, ethnic politics is often embarrassing or meaningless." In New Haven, he set rough dates for the achievement of this state by various groups-the Germans by 1920, the Irish 1930, Russians 1940, Italians 1950, Negroes...
Merge Verge. In Washington, handsome George squired Lynda to the White House state dinner for West Germany's Chancellor Erhard. Another dinner guest, Beauty Columnist Arlene Dahl, wondered how George could "bring out all that beauty in one woman." Part of the answer, of course, is that he introduced brown-eyed Lynda to Hollywood makeup artists and jet-set couturiers. But her new look does not disguise the rare effulgence of a girl in love. Diagnosed Dahl: "She's mad about...
...Angeles since 1948 because "I like it here," and besides, "if you are good, people will seek you out, no matter where you live." They do, although his location also makes him a natural for more fashionable members of the movie colony, such as Rosalind Russell, Arlene Dahl, Mrs. Robert Stack and Mrs. Kirk Douglas. He has a flair that strikes Italian designers like Emilio Pucci as quintessentially American. His trademark is an extravagantly Californian style: exuberant use of chiffon, bold sun colors such as orange and yellow, the revival of striking art nouveau prints. His magnificent "at home" wear...