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Word: davids (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...What the engine is to the automobile," said M.C. David Susskind on his talkathon Open End, "the writer is to a theatrical production. Our guests tonight are seven Cadillacs, the key creators of many of TV's finest hours." The Cadillacs: Robert Alan Arthur, Paddy Chayevsky, Sumner Locke Elliott. James Lee, J. P. Miller, Tad Mosel, David Shaw-almost all of whom have abandoned TV. As a producer (Du Pont Show of the Month) and the Custer of live TV drama (TIME, June 2), Susskind wanted to know why the writers had given up. Why not stay...

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

...Young to Know. In 42 years with Manhattan's Russeks clothing store, David Nemerov rose from window dresser to president, and later chairman of the board. Last year he began to find the position "worrisome," and retired to Palm Beach to paint. Now 64, and one year old as an artist, Nemerov is happy and unworried. Last week a Manhattan gallery put on a show of his crude but luminous and intensely colorful pictures based mainly on French impressionism. To Nemerov's astonishment, 31 pictures were sold in the first four days at prices...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Desk Set | 11/24/1958 | See Source »

...primitive artists were after: not beauty so much as life. In fact, says Elisofon, some of the objects "were believed to be alive by their makers. An important belief of the Polynesians was in mana, an impersonal supernatural power. Sculptures contained mana." Such modern sculptors as Lipchitz, Gonzalez, David Smith and Brancusi are not far from this idea, and for mana they, too, sacrifice resemblance. "The primitive artist and the modern one," says Elisofon, "both produce more of what they feel than of what they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: MANA FROM HARVARD | 11/24/1958 | See Source »

...list of men who have drifted here from New Haven is a long and distinguished one, including Dean Bundy, Archibald MacLeish, Dean Brooks, V. O. Key, Andrew Gleason, David Owen, Kingman Brewster, Whiting, and many others. Yale also has its share of defectors, men like Paul Hammond, Blitzer, Robert Lane, Richard Ruggles, H. Bradford Westerfield, and James Tobin. Besides the momentous choice of football loyalties, these people who have had associations with both schools have some interesting observations about the different characteristics of each...

Author: By Mark H. Alcott, | Title: Look Homeward, Angel: Divided Allegiances | 11/22/1958 | See Source »

...Medford, Mass. 75 Foker, John E. '59 T 21 6.5 218 Minneapolis, Minn. 76 Clark, William D. '61 T 18 6.2 198 Cincinnati, Ohio 77 Briggs, Peter G. '59 T 21 6.3 225 Marblehead, Mass. 78 Francis, Edward L. '59 T 21 6.2 215 Dover, Mass. 80 Cappiello, David L. '60 E 19 5.11 190 Auburn, N. Y. 81 Kirk, Paul G., Jr. '60 E 20 5.11 185 Newton, Mass. 82 Sullivan, Jeremia J., Jr. '61 E 20 5.11 179 Cambridge, Mass. 83 Aadalen, Richard J. '61 E 19 6.3 195 Red Wing, Minn. 84 Keohane, Harold...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Harvard Squad | 11/22/1958 | See Source »

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