Word: donald
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Richard Blumenthal of New York (Government); Claudi Canizares of Yonkers, N.Y. (Physics); Gregory B. Craig of McLean, Va. (History); Stuart A. Davis of Winchester (English); Donald J. Friedman of Evanston, Ill. (History); Kenneth C. Froewiss of Short Hills, N.J. (Economics); David J. Gleason of New Britain, Conn. (History); A. Arthur Kuflik of Brooklyn, N.Y. (Philosophy); William L. Lepowsky of Flushing, N.Y. (Mathematics) and David S. Lindsay of New York (Physics...
SNOW WHITE, by Donald Barthelme. A zany, explosive adult version of the old fairy tale, told with Joycean zest by a gifted young (36) anarchist in the world of words...
...raid was at my golf club," spluttered President Dwight M. Cochran of Kern County Land Co. after Occidental Petroleum's bitterly contested two-step offer last month to buy 23% of his asset-laden oil and farming firm. With such tactics, a group of Detroit financiers led by Donald H. Parsons, 36, has taken over five Michigan banks in the past year and forced American Metal Products into a merger with Lear-Siegler. Last week the Parsons group snared a sixth bank, the Monroe (Mich.) State Savings Bank, whose directors approved a tender offer for all its shares...
...rising costs, many dioceses have shut down or combined marginal and inefficient schools, and some administrators are beginning to wonder whether it might ultimately be necessary to abandon parochial school education entirely. "If it comes to a point where we couldn't pay a living wage," admits Monsignor Donald Montrose, superintendent of Los Angeles' archdiocesan high schools, "maybe we shouldn't be in the education game." Noting that the expense of maintaining the U.S. church's century-old parochial school system is "becoming a real problem," St. Louis' Joseph Cardinal Ritter recently told a television...
...several years worth of careful court litigation required so far to arrive at just procedures for the treatment of conscientious objectors. The House bill demands a return to the old requirement of objection solely on grounds of "religious training and belief." This provision is, fortunately, legally useless. As Rep. Donald Edwards (D.-Calif.) pointed out in the House debate over the bill, the wording would allow the courts to continue to interpret "religious belief" broadly...