Word: patricias
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...bitter dispute over wages. It also recounts the unfortunate-occasionally amusing-effects of the walkout. Our correspondents from all over the country filed voluminous reports to Senior Editor Laurence Barrett, Writer Peter Stoler and Researcher Marion Pikul. In New York City, where the trouble began, Researchers Madeleine Berry, Patricia Beckert and Georgia Harbison were detailed to sound out the mood and reaction of the citizenry. Other correspondents covered angry strikers' meetings, interviewed businessmen and bankers, Post Office, Government and union officials, letter carriers and clerks. Correspondent Rudolph Rauch had a special interest in the strike's early settlement...
...side step. The incongruities somehow blend into a consistent display of Balanchine's mastery of forms. Who Cares?, in fact, is practically an anthology in action of his knowledge of dance. Male Lead Jacques D'Amboise has separate pas de deux with three different ballerinas (Marnee Morris, Patricia McBride, Karin von Aroldingen). The mood of each dance is bittersweet romantic; yet they are wholly different in shape, tempo and feeling. And Balanchine's leaping, exactingly athletic solo for D'Amboise, in Liza, should forever dispel the snide rumor that he does not choreograph well for male...
...attempts to recreate Georgy Girl's stylish London also fail. Jo Miclziner's sets have no unity and seem rather a grabbag of Sean Kenny schtick with a few Oliver Smith staircases thrown in. Patricia Zipprodt-the best costume designer in the business-has managed to add to the trampiness of Meredith by giving her a succession of booker-ish rather than Mod-ish outfits. Peter Hunt's staging is in the best Hot Spot tradition...
Married. Milton R. Young, 72, Republican Senator from North Dakota since 1945; and Patricia Byrne, his secretary for 24 years; he for the second time; in a Roman Catholic ceremony at Arlington...
...Republic. A majority of seven members declared that they could not endorse a principle that may encourage anarchy. They suggested that a law should be obeyed, even if it may be unconstitutional, until a few citizens test the issue in the courts. Among the six commissioners who disagreed was Patricia Roberts Harris,* former U.S. Ambassador to Luxembourg. Mrs. Harris, a Negro, pointed out that blacks would have made little progress if they had relied on lawful tactics alone. "A nation whose history enshrines the civil disobedience of the Boston Tea Party," she said, "cannot fail to recognize at least...