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Word: harolde (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...other side, Iowa's Democratic Harold Hughes will be more liberal than retiring Republican Bourke Hickenlooper. Missouri's Thomas Eagleton will also be more liberal?and more useful?than Edward Long, whom Eagleton defeated in the primary election. And some of the new Republican Senators, notably Maryland's Charles McCurdy Mathias Ir. and Pennsylvania's Richard Schweiker, will add strength to the growing group of G.O.P. progressives...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: STILL LIBERAL, BUT LESS SO | 11/15/1968 | See Source »

Iowa. In three terms as Iowa's Governor, Harold E. Hughes, 46, has established himself as an independent and popular liberal. A handsome former truck driver who entered politics when he became angry at the state Commerce Commission, Democrat Hughes was enlisted for the Senate race by Robert Kennedy. A Viet Nam dove and gun-control advocate in a hawkish, rifle-owning state, Hughes was hard pressed by Republican David Stanley, but lowans decided to send their Governor to Washington...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WHO'S NEW IN THE SENATE | 11/15/1968 | See Source »

...private plane in which he was a passenger crashed in an Iowa field. Ray's ankle was shattered in the accident, and the 40-year-old Republican moderate still limps. But his campaign did not. The one-time state G.O.P. chairman moved handily into the spot that existing Governor Harold Hughes had hoped to reserve for the Democratic candidate, State Treasurer Paul Franzenburg...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GOVERNORS: The G.O.P's Big Gain | 11/15/1968 | See Source »

...Gandar, who was arraigned last week for, as he put it, "fulfilling the recognized duty of a newspaper." As Gandar saw that duty, it included publishing a 1965 expose of conditions in South Africa's prisons, re lated mainly by an artist and onetime air force lieutenant named Harold Strachan. During three years as a political prisoner, Strachan recounted, he frequently saw black prisoners whipped, kicked and tortured with shocks from an electrotherapy machine. The Mail collected an affidavit from Strachan, and sworn corroborating statements from two warders and two ex-prison ers, to back up a sensational series...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: South Africa: A Matter of Duty | 11/15/1968 | See Source »

Patchwork Life. Willis Mosby shares Braun's detachment, if not his ethnic background. An American Christian gentleman and noted action-intellectual, he has withdrawn to Mexico to write his memoirs "in the vein of Sir Harold Nicolson or Santayana or Bertrand Russell." He deals at length with his patchwork life; his fundamentalist upbringing, his Rhodes scholar days, his unorthodox interpretation of John Locke, a stint for Hearst in Spain, wartime service with the OSS, and his views on F.D.R., Comte, Proudhon, Marx and Tocqueville. But then Mosby decides that his memoir needs a touch of humor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Care Package | 11/8/1968 | See Source »

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