Word: manhattan
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...moved him from his intelligence beat to general assignment, ostensibly so that he could report on stories in which he is not personally involved. CBS executives in New York are reportedly deeply displeased by the Pike papers episode, partly because Schorr gave the papers to the Village Voice, a Manhattan weekly tabloid. One executive explained that Schorr's link with the "ant10-Establishment" Voice had political overtones that might be unsettling to some CBS affiliates...
...expanded board (they fill nine of 17 seats now) and empower them with responsibility for preventing a recurrence of past misdeeds. One charge contained in the settlement documents: Richard Nixon in 1968 "personally" received an illegal $50,000 campaign contribution from Phillips in his Fifth Avenue apartment in Manhattan...
...white and inscribed only with the stenciled name of its owner, the T shirt has evolved and proliferated at a bewildering rate. Last week that evolution reached its highest stage yet with the introduction of Body Language, a collection that speaks for itself (see first color page). Shown in Manhattan by Promoter Philip Fox, these startling shirts will go on sale in March and could soon make the double take an institution on city streets. One, emblazoned with realistic-looking and oddly placed eyes, will put any woman one-up on male bosom watchers: her chest will stare back...
...beginning to seem as if Mrs. Warren's Profession is as old as Mrs. Warren's profession. Still, after 70 years, the market for both remains strong. Producer Joseph Papp's new mounting at Manhattan's Vivian Beaumont Theater is an opportunity to see again Shaw's comedy about a fallen woman who is as prosperous and self-justified as any other successful capitalist...
...became a fixture at The New Yorker, to which he contributed from 1932 to 1974 an unfailingly cheery, name-dropping Christmas greeting in verse. Buring the 1920s, '30s and '40s, the natty, expansively girthed Sullivan was a member of the Algonquin Round Table, a legendary luncheon club of such Manhattan wits as Robert Benchley and Borothy Parker...