Word: freemans
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Harvard winners of the Woodrow on Fellowships included Stephen L. Kirby A. Baker, John S. Belmont, on S.P. Bennett, Alan V. Berger, e A. Burnham, Denis P. Coughlin, d C. Davidson, Preston O. de Long, pe de Montebello, Guido F. Di Meo, mith Freeman...
...month behind the U.S. Air Force secrecy curtain came the two RB-47 airmen who were released by the Russians shortly after John Kennedy's inauguration. In a prepared joint statement, followed by a question-and-answer session at Forbes Air Force Base, near Topeka,Kans., Captains Freeman B. Olmstead and John McKone (TIME cover, Feb. 3) told newsmen what happened to them after their RB-47 was shot down over the Barents Sea last July while flying a "ferret" mission to test Russian radar defenses. Their story of personal bravery under intense cold war pressures left unanswered...
...sallied out at various times to serve as a financial adviser to U.S. Military Governor Lucius Clay in occupied Germany (1947-48), financial adviser to the U.N., a member of the Treasury team that worked out Korean war tax increases, fiscal adviser to Minnesota's Governor Orville Freeman (Secretary of Agriculture in the new Administration), consultant to the state tax department and, last summer, tax-reform adviser to the government of Jordan...
Behind a rather placid-seeming, professorial surface, Walter Heller seethes with drive and energy. In 1955, working on economic messages and policy papers for Governor Freeman atop a heavy academic load, Heller developed a stubborn case of rheumatic fever. Hospitalized for six months, he had a dictating machine set up beside his bed and kept right on working. He still takes a penicillin pill every morning to prevent a recurrence. For recreation back home in Minnesota, Heller used to go into the backyard and chop firewood for hours...
From his 115-acre, upstate New York farm, Breed Improver and erstwhile Agriculture Secretary Henry A. Wallace, 72, came to the defense of the harried incumbent, Orville Freeman. Also taking credit for an old idea and phrase while he was about it, the ex-Vice President wrote to a columnist last week: "[Freeman's] statements thus far have been all to the good. In fact, like his boss, he has adopted some of my statements like 'We should look on the farm surplus as a blessing instead of a curse.' You, of course, remember my book...