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Word: normans (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...Harvard graduate student said last night the student whose records Elder was asked to produce are the following: Diane C. Abramson, John C. Berg, Norman Daniels, Frank Domurad, Paul r. Gomberg, Alan Gilnert, Mark S. Gould, Alan Jehlen, Susan B. Jhirad, Temma E. Kaplan, Elizabeth Katz, Joel A. Klein, Peter H. Knapp, Stephen J. Likosky, Carl D. Offiner, Alan R. Richards, Howard L. Rolston, Michael H. Schwartz, Pamela A. Smith, Thomas E. Staley, and one unidentified student...

Author: By David N. Hollander and Michael B. Wallace, S | Title: Senate Demands Student Records | 5/28/1969 | See Source »

...thing that Author-Candidate Norman Mailer should not lack in his New York mayoralty campaign is hard cash. The feisty little writer has just been promised $800,000 in advance royalties against a projected book on the Apollo 11 moon landing this summer. Mailer says he plans to combine some flavorful reportage on the Cape Kennedy takeoff with his own ideas on the possible repercussions of lunar landings. The book, which will be published by Little, Brown & Co. and excerpted in LIFE, is also likely to net Mailer another large chunk of money in movie rights-that is, when...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: May 23, 1969 | 5/23/1969 | See Source »

...newspaper encouraged students to "zip" to the mining town of Zap, N.D. (pop. 300) for a Mother's Day "Zap-Out." Sure enough, late last week columns of collegians began rolling down Zap's unpaved main thoroughfare, their cars emblazoned with signs readiag ZAP OR BUST. Mayor Norman Fuchs, sporting a ZAP N.D. OR BUST! sweat shirt, and some of the townsfolk turned out to offer a friendly greeting. All seemed to believe the college newspaper's plan of turning Zap-with its two bars and one café-into "the Fort Lauderdale of the North...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: North Dakota: Zapping Zap | 5/16/1969 | See Source »

Collective Bargaining. Two weeks ago, a federal court jury in Pittsburgh handed down a guilty verdict. Convicted of violating the Sherman Act were American Standard, Kohler Co., and Borg-Warner Corp.-along with Daniel Quinn, Vice President Norman R. Held of Kohler and Joseph J. Decker, manager of product coordination at American Standard. Last year the other twelve companies,* the P.F.M.A. and five executives had decided not to fight the charges; all pleaded "no contest." The courts levied fines totaling $712,500, and the executives served jail sentences of from one to 30 days...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Antitrust: Tub of Trouble | 5/16/1969 | See Source »

...Susan Sontag did not exist, the New York Review of Books might have had to invent her. One moment, in fact, not very long ago she did not exist. The next moment she was everywhere-the new darling of the literary set. Norman Podhoretz, author of Making It, Commentary editor and close student of cultural chic, explained the Sontag phenomenon this way: When Mary McCarthy arrived at "the more dignified status of Grande Dame," she left a vacancy as "Dark Lady of American Letters." With a timing she herself would be the first to appreciate, Miss Sontag appeared...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Dark Lady of the Tuned-in | 5/9/1969 | See Source »

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