Word: frederick
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Once upon a time," said Winnie-the-Pooh, "a man named Frederick C. Crews tried to write a book about critics...
Using his new signature for the first time, Britain's Prime Minister attached his name and family seal to a document renouncing six ancient peerages. Thus, less than a week after taking office, the 14th Earl of Home became Sir Alexander Frederick Douglas-Home, commoner, and so qualified for election to Parliament from a safe Tory seat (Kinross and West Perthshire, Scotland's second-biggest electoral district). Said he: "I don't feel any different." But Britons, who at first were widely skeptical of Lord Home, were already beginning to feel different about Sir Alec...
...matching hat, she sat in an armchair facing the high, white hospital bed. Harold Macmillan, recuperating from his prostate operation and cranked up to a sitting position, wore blue and white pajamas. In such unlikely surroundings Elizabeth received Macmillan's even more unlikely nomination for Prime Minister: Alexander Frederick Douglas-Home, Earl of Home, Baron Home, Baron Dunglass and Baron Douglas...
...need no longer keep talented men out of the Commons, thanks to a bill passed last summer that enables any "reluctant peer" to renounce his titles for life if he wishes.* The 14th Earl of Home will soon be legally and for the rest of his life Sir Alexander Frederick Douglas-Home. His next move will be to run for Parliament from a safe Tory seat. However, he is eager to represent a Scottish constituency, and since no suitable seat will be vacant in the immediate future, he may have to hold on to his title temporarily...
...student lobbyists, all Class of '64, were: Bullard, Alfred J. Alcorn, Peter A. Busch, Morton P. Thomas, John G. Womack, Frederick B. Jufnagel, and Marshall L. Gans