Search Details

Word: harold (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...group of about 35 wealthy people most of whom have given at least $25,000 to his campaign. The club is named after the town in South Dakota where McGovern and his wife Eleanor first met and fell in love. The club's chairman, California Real Estate Dealer Harold Willens, explains that the members have "fallen in love symbolically with George." They include Co-Chairmen Liz Stevens of Washington and Marjorie Benton of Chicago, Xerox Executive Committee Chairman Max Palevsky, Los Angeles Manufacturer Miles Rubin, Actor Warren Beatty, General Motors Heir Stewart Mott, and San Francisco Socialite June Degnan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Why Should the Rich Back McGovern? | 6/19/1972 | See Source »

...three Doctor of Laws presented went to Roy Harris Jenkins, the highly principled former Deputy Leader of the British Labor Party. He resigned only a few months ago in a dispute with British Prime Minister Harold Wilson over the Common Market. In England, Jenkins is known as an almost too-highly-civilized intellectual...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Puseys Head Eight Degree Recipients | 6/15/1972 | See Source »

...other four members of the Committee came from within: Thomas F. Pettigrew, professor of Social Psychology; Harold F. Hanham, professor of History; James M. Jones, assistant professor of Social Psychology; and, Rupert Emerson, professor of Government Emeritus...

Author: By Douglas E. Schoen, | Title: The Debate Over Black Studies Lingers After a Year of Review | 6/15/1972 | See Source »

This proved to be the case when Harold Clancy, President of the Boston Herald-Traveler Corporation, announced the death of his paper. Clancy explained that the loss of Channel Five had cut off "the source of funds essential to continue newspaper operation." He explained that "efforts to find a buyer for our newspaper willing to undertake the burden of three-newspaper competition in the Boston market" had failed, and the sale to the Hearst interests, which publishes the Boston Record-American, a daily tabloid, had been financially expedient...

Author: By Charles B. Straus, | Title: The Herald-Traveler Goes Under; Harvard Faces Emerge on WCVB | 6/15/1972 | See Source »

...world presents itself to me in a many-faceted, elusive vision-I am no longer interested in the now of today. There exists a peripheralness, a border to which the unconscious mind must be let free and unburdened." So says Harold Paris, the bearded, exuberantly loquacious son of an immigrant Yiddish-theater actor, who is having his first major American show at the University Art Museum in Berkeley, Calif. At 46, Paris has been by turns wigmaker, illustrator (for the Army newspaper Stars and Stripes), fisherman, painter, environment maker and sculptor. Though he has exhibited frequently in Europe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Souls in Aspic | 5/22/1972 | See Source »

Previous | 555 | 556 | 557 | 558 | 559 | 560 | 561 | 562 | 563 | 564 | 565 | 566 | 567 | 568 | 569 | 570 | 571 | 572 | 573 | 574 | 575 | Next