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Word: froelicher (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

Beating Doors. Some losers lobbied hard for their jobs. Mizell paid a call on most of the Republican members of the Public Works Committee pleading his interest. Two dozen letters were sent to the White House on his behalf. Harold Froelich, 42, who lost his congressional seat in Wisconsin, rounded up no fewer than 155 supporters in the House who urged his appointment to the Elections Commission (he did not get the job). All things considered, the pressure on the White House to take care of the casualties could have been worse. "I was gearing up for an onslaught," said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLITICS: Best Employment Agency in Town | 3/24/1975 | See Source »

Representatives Charles W. Sandman Jr. (R.-N.J.), Joseph J. Maraziti (R.-N.J.), Wylie Mayne '38 (R.-Iowa) and David W. Dennis (R.-Ind.), all against impeachment, lost their seats in yesterday's election. Rep. Harold V. Froelich (R.-Wisc.), a "swing vote" in the Judiciary Committee hearings who finally voted for impeachment, also lost his seat...

Author: By Margaret A. Shapiro, | Title: Democrats Will Dominate Congress, Statehouses | 11/6/1974 | See Source »

After intermission the recital closed with the big piece on the program--the Piano Quintet in A, op. 81 of Dvorak, with Alan Marks, piano, Robert Portney, first violin, Ronan Lefkowitz, second violin, James Froelich, viola and Mary Ann Elder, cello. It may seem that the performers who choose to play such a bag of musical sweets as this Dvorak Quintet can hardly fail to satisfy, no matter how they play. However, an audience usually senses when the players are "fudging," and does not respond. Here the players admitted nary an iota of fudge to their bag of sweets--just...

Author: By Gary MARK Giblen, | Title: Vital Recital | 7/13/1973 | See Source »

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