Word: earls
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Other included: Kirkland, Bowman Cutter, Alfred Guzetti, John Henn, Frederic Kellogg, Leo Mullin; Leverett, Keith Julian, Ronald Cohen, Michael Reiss, Donald Stern, Earl Leiken; Lowell, David Brandling-Bennet, Charles Bolton, Eugene Kinasewich, Marshall Moriarity, Richard Seymour; Quincy, Duncan Kennedy, Robert Kudrle, Fernand Brunschwig, R. Gilbert Jost, Victor Niederhoffer; Winthrop, Max Byrd, Bruce Paisner, William Grana, Grief Raggio, Robert Benson...
...husband has no title and works for a living, but Princess Alexandra, 26, was hardly rewriting Cinderella. Angus James Bruce Ogilvy, 34, is the handsome, well-heeled second son of the Earl of Airlie, whose ancient Scottish clan (motto: "To the End") won its English title for supporting Charles I in the Civil War-and lost it for 81 years after fighting with Bonnie Prince Charlie against Alexandra's ancestor, George II. After Eton, Oxford and the Scots Guards, Ogilvy joined the investment firm of Harold Drayton, a self-made London multimillionaire whose interests Ogilvy represents (for $300 weekly...
Married. Princess Alexandra Helen Elizabeth Olga Christabel, 26, twelfth in the line of succession to the British throne; and Angus James Bruce Ogilvy, 34, commoner second son of the twelfth Earl of Airlie; in Westminster Abbey, London (see THE WORLD...
Like the Kennedys of Massachusetts, the Longs of Louisiana are a perennially blooming family tree. This season has Congressman Gillis Long, 39, distant cousin of deceased Governors Huey and Earl, declaring himself a gubernatorial hopeful for 1964. Then there is another cousin, State Senator Speedy O. Long, 34; Speedy wants the governor's mansion too, but U.S. Senator Russell B. Long has already pledged support to Cousin Gillis. Meanwhile, Mrs. Blanche Long -Earl's widow and Russell's aunt by marriage-says that she will manage the campaign of a third candidate, not related, Louisiana...
...club owes its name to its regular griddling of top officials, and at its 78th annual dinner, Club President William Beale, Associated Press bureau chief, got the affair going by nodding toward the Supreme Court's Earl Warren, one of 500 guests, and announcing archly: "In deference to the presence here tonight of the Chief Justice of the United States, we shall omit the customary invocation...