Word: greenwich
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...crowd getting ready to leave La Guardia included Ronald Presslaff, 33, who was on his way home to Long Beach, N.Y., after having attended a Christmas family reunion in Indianapolis, and Donald Kochersperger, 57, a mining engineer returning to Greenwich, Conn., after a short business trip to Milwaukee. A limousine driver named Frank Musicaro, 48, was placing a call on his tie line to Dispatcher Jeanne McDonald. "I got my Wantagh passenger," he said. "Where do you want me to go next?" She was about to answer when there was a brilliant white Light and a deafening thunderclap...
COLUMBUS, OHIO is Babbity, stuffy, provincial--no place for would-be artists and full-time innocents like Ruth and Eileen Sherwood. Once ensconced in a basement flat in Greenwich Village, the two sisters--one a stereotypically unattractive, intellectual type, the other a charmingly naive blonde whose every smile fells hordes of men--are all set to have their innocence dispelled and their artistic dreams realized. Along the way, however, they must pay a price in the coinage of musical comedy by exchanging cute quips with picturesque minor characters, whirling across the stage in elaborately choreographed dance numbers and belting...
...lengthy search for Nickerson's successor ended early this week, and the choice of Robert G. Stone '45, a Greenwich, Conn., man closely connected to the New York City business and financial communities, surprised...
...decorum last week and took a turn on the boards during the Taverners' silver jubilee at London's Grosvenor House. Then, after mingling with the ball's 1,300 guests until 2 a.m., the Prince returned to his workaday world at the Royal Naval College at Greenwich...
...Marilyn Monroe. In an altogether sterling cast, the performance of Miss Knight should receive a star of spun gold. Perhaps the most unusual "Kennedy" child of all is the man who wrote the play, 38-year-old Robert Patrick. Born to a Texas dirt-farming family, he emigrated to Greenwich Village in the early '60s, and over the next eleven years saw some 125 productions of his plays put on in café theaters and off-off-Broadway. Through some peculiar critical inadvertence, little or no attention was drawn to them...