Word: patricks
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Faloye Patrick Kaiserslautern, West Germany...
...point sink in, yet building in a gentle cadence to convey undertones of strong emotion, that befittingly climaxed the convention. Carter had spent some 30 hours honing the speech, which was about 65% wholly his own effort. The rest was mostly the work of his top speech writer, Patrick Anderson. Carter had used a tape recorder to practice his delivery. Surprisingly populist in thrust, yet with bows to free enterprise and an appeal to patriotic pride, the speech elaborated on Carter's now familiar campaign themes...
TECHNICALLY, Daniel Patrick Moynihan still is a Harvard Professor. But he has spent about half of his ten years here on sabbatical, leaving his tenured seat in limbo for well-publicized stints in the Nixon White House and ambassadorial posts in India and the United Nations. Although the University is hardly averse to globe-trotting faculty (Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger '50 did not lose his Government Department seat until spring 1973, four years after he had joined the Nixon administration), Moynihan's insatiable penchant for applied government exhausted even Harvard's patience...
Rather like a roving medieval Irish clan, Senator Edward Kennedy and 20 relatives and friends sallied forth into western Massachusetts last week on a camping trip. Among those accompanying Teddy were Wife Joan, Sisters Jean Smith and Eunice Shriver and Children Kara, 16, Ted Jr., 14, and Patrick, 8. They all lived off the fat of the land -cookouts at local friends' homes-endured scraped knees and capsized canoes, and at an amusement park, braved the roller coaster. As ever, the Kennedy holiday was no swing in a hammock...
...already owned nearly 30 honorary degrees, but for Daniel Patrick Moynihan, 49, former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, the offer of another -an honorary doctorate from the Hebrew University in Israel-was too good to resist. Moynihan, whose anti-Arab stand in the U.N. won the hearts of Israel, is now seeking the Democratic U.S. Senate nomination in New York and needs the Jewish vote. So there he was campaigning, in a sense, 6,000 miles from his constituency. One problem: the Israeli leaders he met seemed distracted. "My mind was somewhere else," confessed Defense Minister Shimon Peres after...