Word: eileen
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...cancer six years ago, one tough Irishman was in charge. Arthur J. Cooney ("Tony" was his fellow construction workers' misunderstanding of "Cooney") applied the two disciplines of his life, the Merchant Marine and ironworking, to rearing children. The amalgam amounted to walking a narrow beam at attention. Sometimes Eileen Cooney wonders if her sons did not see gyms as sanctuaries. The challenger's mother is a tall, robust woman, oldfashioned, sort of flusterable, and nice. Her grandmother was acquainted with Gene Tunney's family in Ireland and compelled her as a child to keep still whenever boxing...
Radcliffe's lot a chapter, established in 1914, selected 51 members of the Class of 1982 as new inductees and tapped for honorary memberships. Pauline Kael, film critic for New Yorker Magazine, Aida Press '48 the editor of Radcliffe Quarterly. Eileen Southern, professor of Afro-American Studies and of Music, and Dtana Trilling, author of Mrs. Harris...
Brown, however, came back with some firepower of its own at 22:05 as freshman Bruin Eileen Goldgeier took a pass from Melissa Halverstadt to the left of the goal and surprised everybody (especially Crimson keeper Charlotte Worsley) with a quick-stick that evened things...
Staff Writer Jim Kelly wrote the other main cover story, on the growing awareness and concern among Americans about the threat of nuclear holocaust. He was assisted by Reporter-Researcher Eileen Chiu, while Brigid O'Hara-Forster and JoAnn Lum worked with Talbott. Presiding over the entire package was National Editor John T. Elson, who was struck by the antinuclear movement's broad base. "The early opposition to the Viet Nam War," he says, "was by political radicals, and only later became a popular movement. Today's antinuclear leaders include Roman Catholic archbishops and Harvard law professors...
Reporter-Researcher Eileen Chiu, who double-checked everything in TIME'S excerpts that could be independently verified, was also vacationing in St. Maarten, with her husband and 20-month-old daughter. "We all had dinner together and spent a lot of time talking about how we would handle the material," says Chiu. So, via the Netherlands Antilles, Boston and New York City, TIME can offer its readers a richly detailed account of a most controversial period of American history from one of its principal participants...