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Word: paramours (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Angeles, after two previous juries had deadlocked on the case, ruddy-faced Dr. Raymond Bernard Finch, 43. and Carole Tregoff, 24, his secretary and paramour, were finally found guilty of murdering his wife one summer night in 1959 (TIME, Feb. 15, 1960). The third jury brushed aside Finch's claim that the shooting had been accidental, found him guilty of first-degree murder, her guilty of second-degree murder, and both guilty of conspiracy to murder. When the jury meets again this week to fix punishment, Finch could get death on his first-degree murder count, Carole life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Crime: Defiance & Remorse | 4/7/1961 | See Source »

Thus, we do not know quite what to do when Angelo comes up with a plan to use his son's paramour, a pregnant prostitute, to destroy McCalla for good. So we chuckle. Although the plan is ingeniously appalling, it is not particularly hor-these two sides of Angelo's characrifying, because Angelo is more humorous than human...

Author: By Peter S. Britell, | Title: Bootlegger and the Sheriff | 3/24/1961 | See Source »

...Angeles, Dr. R. Bernard Finch, wealthy and socially prominent physician (with a big swimming pool), and Carole Tregoff, his pretty paramour, were in the midst of a trial for their lives, accused of murdering the doctor's wife in cold blood. On the other side of the world the missing heiress to a typewriter fortune, Debutante Gamble Benedict, turned up in Paris with her Rumanian lover, a married man (see PEOPLE...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE NATION: Porcelain & Clay | 1/25/1960 | See Source »

...mood music shimmers. But the only unfailing source of power and passion in the play is the bravura performance of Geraldine Page. Whether she is thrashing about in bed crying for her oxygen mask after a days-long vodka-and-goofball binge or clawing apart her hired paramour's tape-recorded blackmail scheme, Actress Page is just what the character she plays fears, "the tiger in the nerves jungle." Whenever she stalks offstage, the play exits with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: New Plays on Broadway, Mar. 23, 1959 | 3/23/1959 | See Source »

...furnished it. In Cue for Passion the furnishings are sparser and extremely modern, with a picture window to let in strong, clarifying, psychological light. Hamlet, called Tony Burgess, comes home-sulky, sneering, perverse-after two years in Asia, certain that his new stepfather was his mother's paramour, suspecting he is also his father's murderer. This is an Oedipus-uncomplex Hamlet, so drawn to his mother that he hated his father, so identified with the lover's role that to kill his stepfather would be to kill himself. Truth tumbles out in a climactic modern Closet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: New Plays in Manhattan, Dec. 8, 1958 | 12/8/1958 | See Source »

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