Word: pattersons
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...expedition was one of five led by Bryan Patterson, professor of Vertebrate Paleontology. The expeditions, sponsored by Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology with support from the National Science Foundation, searched for fossils in northwestern Kenya...
...nice shot by Wayne Radomsky early in the second period and continually gave Harvard abuse in the corners that was infrequently returned. Harvard regained the lead on a fluke, no-angle shot by Bob McManama, but Brown came right back on another nice slapshot, this time by Dave Patterson...
...went into naval aviation and rose to the rank of captain. By then he had already founded Newsday with an investment of $50,000 in 1940; the paper grew into a vast success in no small part because of the brilliant direction provided by his wife Alicia Patterson, who was its editor and publisher until her death in 1963. Guggenheim carried on for a while alone, then with former L.B.J. Aide Bill Moyers as publisher, until last May, when he sold his 51% interest in Newsday to the Times Mirror Co., publisher of the Los Angeles Times...
...must agree with Professors Kilson, Nwafor, Patterson, and others that all publicly announced meetings or lectures sponsored by any department in the University should not exclude any portion of the University community. The incident concerning the lecture given by Mrs. DuBois sponsored by the Afro-American Studies Department which excluded whites was unfortunate. Perhaps lectures of this nature need not take place at Harvard but rather within the larger black community...
...wish to register my concurrence with professor Orlando Patterson's expression of outrage in today's CRIMSON (Jan 22nd) at attempts by extremist elements among Negro students in this University to exclude white students and faculty from public meetings. Indeed, this behavior, which cuts at the very roots of the University, is so intellectually vulgar and so morally reprehensible that it must be brought to a halt. here...