Word: edward
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...taking my wife to dinner and a movie tonight,” Clinton said. “Even though ‘Commander In Chief’ is on television,” alluding to the ABC television program about the first female president. Senator Edward M. Kennedy ’54 and Caroline Kennedy ’80, who many speakers called integral to planning the event, also spoke during the forum. In her opening remarks, Kennedy paid tribute to her adventurous younger brother, noting that he often told her that “second children start revolutions...
...Even some residents feel it's time to let the Ninth die peacefully. Across Flood Street from Hagan's home, Dahlre Brown, 42, and her husband, Edward Brooks, 36, warily entered their house after driving in from Brookhaven, Miss., where they plan to settle permanently now. "The fact is," said Brown, watching Salvation Army and EPA vans cruise the block, "this is a crime-ridden area and not an especially good place to raise kids. Over in Brookhaven they've got a 15-mph speed limit for school zones. Here they'll run your kids over." Brown points inside...
...fulfilling life.“He had just finished reading ‘The Iliad,’ which is something he always wanted to do, just the Thursday before he died,” she said.Manne is survived by wife Jacqueline and three children: sons Henry and Edward ’78 of Israel and Elizabeth of New York, along with 11 grandchildren and one great-grandchild...
...Edward R. Murrow had a greatvoice--a sincere and authoritative baritone. His speech was formal and literate. He was a liberal in the great American tradition--less an ideologue than a champion of fair play and common decency. The first thought you have, watching Good Night, and Good Luck in the age of Limbaugh and O'Reilly, is one of intense nostalgia. By the standards of modern television--or even television in his time--Ed Murrow was an imposing figure...
Even before David Strathairn opens his mouth, though, the sober grimace on his long face tells you that something is wrong. He’s playing legendary CBS News broadcaster Edward R. Murrow, and the year is 1958, as it turns out. But Strathairn is talking directly to you as he delivers a speech from the dais, meeting your eyes in 2005 as he rips into a complacent culture’s “allergy to disturbing information...