Word: dwights
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...cover drawing, Brooklyn-born Levine, 41, worked from photographs and imagination, as he usually does for his caricatures. He looks upon himself as "a painter supported by a hobby-satirical drawings." The first of several New York showings of his paintings was held in 1954; Dwight Eisenhower and the John F. Kennedys were among the purchasers of his works. He turned to caricature in 1960, and in 1966 published a book of cartoons called The Man from M.A.L.I.C.E. His one previous cover for TIME was the Nov. 3 issue's William F. Buckley...
Stein and Dwight L. Bolinger, proftssor of Romance Languages and Literatures, both sent letters to the CEP in December supporting retention of the of the language requirement...
...those years, too, he noted that "the workers love Khrushchev very much. He hasn't got an enemy in the entire country. Quite a few under it." And Dwight Eisenhower was always "the pro from the White House. I knew him when he was a general-he had authority then." In the '60s, Hope declared that he had "played the South Pacific while Lieut. John Kennedy was there, and he was a very gay, carefree young man. Of course, all he had to worry about then was the enemy...
Just as no one had stood out in Harvard's victories, all were equally off form in defeat. The only exceptions were Gurry and penalty killers Dwight Ware and Chip Otness, who even combined on a break-away try in the third period. Ware's performance prompted the biggest applause by the Harvard fans, many of whom would like to see the Crimson junior taking regular turns...
...presidential aspirations, Reagan predictably disavowed any personal desire ("Anyone would have to be out of his skull to want to be President"), but refused to make a "Sherman statement" and quoted Dwight Eisenhower as saying that "it was a foolish statement, and Sherman shouldn't have made it." Reagan's reluctance to opt out was justified by a yet-to-be-released poll taken by the liberal Republican Ripon Society, which finds him, along with Richard Nixon, standing "the nearest step away from the 1968 Republican nomination," with George Romney and Nelson Rockefeller far to the rear...