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Word: hemingways (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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MARRIED. Margaux Hemingway, 24, occasional actress; and French-born Film Maker Bernardo Foucher, 40; she for the second time, he for the fourth; in Margaux's native Ketchum, Idaho...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Jan. 14, 1980 | 1/14/1980 | See Source »

...will know. In Manhattan, though, he winningly has his ex-wife write about his obsessive narcissism, and the end of that film seems to me truer than anything he's done yet. Exactly because it's about the limitations of the Woody Allen persona, and the possibility that Mariel Hemingway stands for something different and better, that he ought to move himself to see her. He's always had an inviolable thin honesty, and it suggests that what he may go on to do (which is well worth doing), is to expose the sorry evasive figure who was so welcomingly...

Author: By Peter Swaab, | Title: Academia Meets The Loser | 12/11/1979 | See Source »

...Family sitcom series stars this week in My Old Man, a TV movie in which she is Jo Butler, the track-wise daughter of a down-on-his-luck horse trainer, played by Warren Gates. The film is out of a short story of the same title by Ernest Hemingway, but the bloodline is a little thin. Joe Butler, the American boy in Hemingway's tale about seedy racing in Europe between the wars, never got to ride Gilford. McNichol does, and if you want to know how she fares, tune...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Dec. 10, 1979 | 12/10/1979 | See Source »

...gone? Our era's cynicism and suspicion have seen more and more former idols rudely picked off their pedestals as they fall victim to literary sharpshooters armed with innuendo and calumny. Self-annointed revisionists continue to issue one-sided tracts condemning JFK's affairs, Elvis's drug addiction, and Hemingway's latent homosexuality. To err may be human, but to forgive seems well beyond today's all-consuming passion to wallow in the filth of others--especially when that filth is a residue of the rich and renowned...

Author: By Paul E. Hunt, | Title: Whipping The Post | 12/10/1979 | See Source »

...immediately before it. But critics of ECT, even as it is practiced today, say that it can also cause permanent brain damage, including a loss of memory of events in the more distant past. Still, any evidence of long-term memory loss is conflicting and anecdotal. For example, Ernest Hemingway was convinced that ECT ruined his writing career by wiping out his store of experiences. Marilyn Rice, a former Government economist, claims the treatments obliterated her expertise and forced her early retirement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Comeback for Shock Therapy? | 11/19/1979 | See Source »

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