Word: lasch
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Plaines, Ill. 66 Couturier, Richard '62 20 6:0 207 Toledo, O. 65 *Graham, James '60 21 6:3 202 Battle Creek, Mich. 64 Clark, Philip '60 21 5:10 203 Sacramento, Cal. 63 Chapman, Charles '61 21 5:11 185 Darien, Conn. 61 Lasch, Steven '62 19 5:11 182 Chicago, Ill. 60 *Boye, Robert '60 21 5:10 191 Short Hills, N. J. CENTERS 75 Grudi, Walter '62 19 6:3 205 Washington, Pa. 54 *DeHaven, Kenneth '61 20 6:1 202 Dayton, O. 53 Tragakis, William '62 19 5:8 184 Watertown, Mass. 51 McElhinney, James...
...certain what will happen when Fitz comes back. His contract runs until the end of the year, but at 67, he admits he is wearying of the daily grind. All questions about the future are referred by Publisher Joseph Pulitzer Jr., 44, to Editorial Page Editor Robert Lasch, 51, who took over in October of last year, has given deft direction to the crusades of the idealistic, New Deal-leaning PD. "Maybe Mauldin will be taken on as a kind of understudy to Fitz," says Lasch. "But maybe we won't like Mauldin, and maybe...
Staffers of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch puzzled last week over a change in chairs. Illinois-born Irving Billiard, 52, a 30-year P-D veteran, stepped down as chief of the editorial page to become an editorial writer. His replacement: Editorial Writer Robert Lasch, 50, former chief of the Chicago Sun-Times editorial page, who was brought to the paper by Billiard seven years...
Publisher Joseph Pulitzer Jr., 44, announced that the change was "administrative" and reflects "no change in editorial policy." Why the shift? Said Billiard, nodding in the direction of Pulitzer's office: "You ought to get that from the White House." But neither Pulitzer, Lasch nor Billiard would say another word. One insider's explanation: though Lasch is considered "a political twin" of the pro-Stevenson, anti-Eisenhower Billiard, he has taken a more gingerly tack in pursuing his views with a reluctant Pulitzer. This would mean that while the tenets of the paper's liberal policy...
...stories in this Advocate, both unpretentious and excellently written. Except for a few lines of mutually embarrassing dialect ("Da Jevvys don't want no one screwin' roun' wi dat pia-ano . . ."), Frederick Kimball's account of an artist in Jesuit clothing moves serenely to its well-ordained conclusion. Christopher Lasch's story of boy's despair before a more accomplished, less dependent companion never loses subtlety at the expense of clarity...