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Word: moorehead (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...Denise Moorehead '77 will serve as vice-president of the RUS next year, Susan Oliver '78 as treasurer and Kathy Zeitlin '79 as secretary. Barbara Norris '77 and Susan Comstock '78 will represent the RUS as delegates to the Radcliffe Governing Board and elections for House and Yard representatives to the RUS legislature will be held next fall...

Author: By Jonathan H. Alter, | Title: Ruth Colker Elected RUS President | 5/28/1976 | See Source »

...technical production staged by producers Denise Moorehead and Mercedes Laing is magnificent. Glenn Berenbeim's set is amazingly versatile and visually amazing. At times the tech is too much stronger than the acting it supports; the moving platform upstages the court as much as their ornate boxes dwarf them. The costumes, designed by Berenbeim and executed by Lynn Rodriguez, are beautifully distinct and salvage a few scenes; without the gaudy accoutrements of their offices, the court characters would be a homogenous disaster. The tech as a whole bypasses the usual primitive motifs seen in The Blacks and opts instead...

Author: By R.e. Liebmann, | Title: A Gray Genet | 4/14/1976 | See Source »

Baffling Travelers. A chronicle in which explorer after explorer vanishes into the jungle necessarily lacks the grand narrative sweep of Alan Moorehead's The White Nile and The Blue Nile. But Sanche de Gramont, an able journalist and popular historian (The French: Portrait of a People), has written a book, covering roughly the years 1790 to the present, with its own ironic fascination. At the outset, as was true of the Nile, no European knew the source of the Niger (in the mountains about 200 miles east of Sierra Leone). Its destination was also unknown. There were even disputes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: African Genesis | 3/22/1976 | See Source »

Moreover, the smooth Fleet Street professional is not without his own inadequacies. His preferences are understandable. The flamboyant correspondents make livelier copy than Knightley's accounts of Edward R. Murrow, A.J. Liebling, Alan Moorehead and Ernie Pyle-men who muffled the "boom-boom" in favor of the human voice. But as every journalist learns, readability has its casualties...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Blazing Pencils | 9/22/1975 | See Source »

Died. Agnes Moorehead, 67, consummate character actress; in Rochester, Minn. The daughter of a Presbyterian minister, Moorehead worked on the New York stage, then turned to radio, where she re-created the voices of notable women for the March of Time. A co-founder with Orson Welles of the Mercury Theater, she helped him perpetrate the 1938 "invasion from Mars" radio broadcast and in 1941 landed the first of her hundred or so screen roles in Citizen Kane (as Kane's mother). An Oscar nominee for five films including Hush ... Hush, Sweet Charlotte (she never won), she was best...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, May 13, 1974 | 5/13/1974 | See Source »

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