Word: rive
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...press. But Burnett, among others, argues that the First Amendment also requires a responsibility on the part of the news organization. Her attorneys are lining up supporting testimony from such witnesses as Kissinger, MCA Chairman Lew Wasserman (Kissinger's dinner partner at the Washington restaurant, reportedly the Rive Gauche) and Burnett's husband, Producer Joe Hamilton...
...very proper, very dignified, like Pat Nixon. But she will go a few steps further, closer to Jackie Onassis." Top U.S. designers, anticipating a boost in business, note approvingly that Nancy wears American clothes almost exclusively (she has a few dresses from French Couturier Yves Saint Laurent's Rive Gauche...
Warm, Witty. In 1933 Calder and his wife Louisa (a grandniece of William and Henry James) bought an old farmhouse in Roxbury, Conn., which became home for the artist's astonishing fecundity. His Roxbury studio resembled a tinker's shop more than some rive gauche atelier; wire and pliers and corrugated cartons filled with the flotsam of a lifetime lay about in splendid I-know-just-where-it-is disarray. There, and in the house near Tours, France, that he acquired in 1953, the sculptor would lumber about, creating a stage set for Martha Graham, fashioning coffee cups...
...work by two students from the University of New Hampshire, "Energy Games," took up one theme with which Black and Morgenroth, too, were concerned--using energy as speedily as possible. Rather than structure their piece into a series of discrete events, as did the two established choreographers, Jeanette Rive and Christian Swenson blurred the lines of their choreography. One could never say what was happening at any exact moment. Costumed in gray leotards and silver hoods, the two ended the piece by melting in a heap as the music of Larry Coryell and Oscar Sala petered...
...personal life-style-he has a comfortable apartment on Paris' Rive Gauche, a country home, a passion for modern art-he resembles a successful businessman more than a spokesman for the working class. On television and radio, he has tried to sound moderate and conciliatory. He has recruited modishly dressed young people for his campaign staff and set up a headquarters in a new glass and steel skyscraper -all to make himself appear modern and technocratic...