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...that flamboyant sports-caster of CBS television-Heywood Hale Broun. The Arts Festival will also feature piano recitals by Joseph Block and Armenta Adams, and will conclude its final weekend with a Quincy House production of Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, directed by David Richman...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Drama, Speakers, Film, Man-of-the-Year, Art, Literature, Sports, Music-Springtime! | 4/10/1970 | See Source »

...bank's analysts handle more than 11,000 personal and institutional investment accounts, each of which usually must have a minimum of $200,000. Portfolio managers service the proverbially helpless richman's widow as well as the young business-school graduate who uses his M.B.A. training to turn the modest old family firm into a gold mine. Real estate experts on the bank's 1,200-man staff will advise on matters like buying a villa on the Mediterranean. The bank also lends money for many investments. Altogether, the company charges the usual brokerage commission plus advisory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Investment: When a Fellow Needs a Fiduciary | 8/15/1969 | See Source »

...surrounding hostilities. Their lives are empty except for that of the ten-year-old girl (Kate Soloman) who--in a single half hour--alludes to Homer, the Bible, Milton, James Joyce, and Lewis Carroll. The play smacks too much of a kind of self-indulgence that the author, David Richman, should avoid in the future. The bits of naturalistic dialogue that he does include are biting enough to be further developed in his next...

Author: By Gregg J. Kilday, | Title: The Turncoats & The Last War's End | 3/7/1969 | See Source »

...David Richman, a freshman at Harvard who has been blind all his life, started out in a residential school, but switched at an early age to a public school with special facilities for the blind, such as Braille lessons. After seventh grade David went through the regular public school system. He feels that this was the best thing he could have done. A residential school is a "very unreal environment," he said. "It is a closed stale society, ignorant of the outside world. The transition from a school for the blind to a sighted university is almost impossible...

Author: By Laura R. Benjamin, | Title: Being Blind at Harvard | 1/16/1969 | See Source »

...girls remaining in Holmes, Susan Richman '71 said, "I'm not bothered by the noise at all. I requested Holmes Hall and I'm glad I got it." Katherine H. Solomon '72 said, "A water pump goes all night but I'm used to living on a main street, so it doesn't bother...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cliffies From Holmes Hall Flee Noise and Uniformity | 10/17/1968 | See Source »

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