Word: harwoods
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Ronald Harwood...
...wasn't as if everybody just sat around and twiddled their thumbs. Everybody argued vociferously," Michael Harwood, a freelance writer, says today...
...politically and take any direct action, for it was not until after their school years that the issues came to a head. "The question of equal rights was a sore one, but it hadn't really sharpened. There wasn't something--such as the Selma march--to gather around," Harwood, recalls. Even if the rising concern with civil rights ignited a dialogue among students infused with firm political convictions, wide segments of Harvard remained undented, James H. Barton '56 mentions the extreme of his own apathy, "You've heard of the 1954 Supreme Court decision, Brown versus the school board...
...When the material is tepid, she puts a fire under it to make it percolate. When given a strong scene, like the dying Evita's farewell radio address, she can key several moods - weariness, coquetry, defiance - while providing the scene with a swift climactic kick. But Writer Ronald Harwood and Director Marvin Chomsky allow too much of Evita Perón to glide by on casters; and James Farentino, as Perón, looks and acts as if he could be Robert De Niro's older brother who went into accounting. One brief scene - in which Eva greets...
While diplomatic negotiations to free the hostages were stalemated during much of 1980, U.S. bankers maintained contact with the Iranian government through international law firms. Attorneys from Shearman & Sterling, lawyers for New York's Citibank, regularly held meetings with representatives of Stephenson Harwood, counsel for Bank Markazi. Keeping communications channels open between the two sides helped ease the way for the later settlement...