Word: harold
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...night last January, Harold Adrian Russell Philby, 51, a British journalist based in Lebanon, headed off for an appointment, telling his wife Eleanor that he would join her later in the evening at a dinner party at the Beirut home of a British embassy official. Philby not only did not show up at the party, but dropped out of sight in Beirut altogether...
...been warned by a government official that the heat was on, and in 1955 a Labor M.P. rose in the House of Commons to accuse Philby of being the tipster. Admitting that Philby had been asked to resign from the Foreign Office because of his friendship with Burgess, Harold Macmillan, then Foreign Secretary, otherwise completely cleared him of any charge of treason or of being the "socalled 'third man,' if indeed there was one." But despite the official exoneration, doubts remained, which were in no way dispelled by Kim Philby's refusal to disavow his friendship with...
...Folley victory looks impressive on paper, but to anyone who saw the fight it was apparent that Jones was suffering more than Folley until that lucky punch. Also, Jones was outpointed by Harold by Harold Johnson in a light heavyweight title fight last year. Ballooned to 186, Jones may have trouble matching the speed of flashy Cassius...
...Msgr. William McManus. He prefers counseling to regulating, even though "steady dating is getting to be old hat in Chicago." As for public schools, one top Denver official typically rejects rules on dating as "an invasion of rights that belong in the home." San Francisco's School Superintendent Harold Spears holds a really steady view of steady dating: "I think that's a natural biological urge, and I would hate to have to enforce...
...Harold Roberts, chairman of the Methodist representatives, admitted that "radical adjustments are demanded of Methodists in the proposals we are putting forward." Perhaps the adjustments will be too radical. Four of Roberts' representatives signed a "dissentient" minority report, warning that many Methodists would be unable to accept such violations of tradition as episcopal organization. Wesley, the dissidents noted, called apostolic succession "a fable which no man ever did or could prove." Their conclusion: "To move from a Church committed to the evangelical faith into a heterogeneous body permitting, and even encouraging, unevangelical doctrines and practices, would be a step...