Word: samuel
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Moylan, Pa., Hedgerow Theater: No More Parades, a new play by Samuel Hall...
...Jerusalem Museum of Art is quite a dream in itself. Now being built on top of a sawed-off hill near the Israeli Knesset, it will house not onlv the old Bezalel National Museum, which is the largest general museum in the Middle East, but also the Samuel Bronfman Archaeology Museum, a Shrine of the Book (to 'hold the Dead Sea Scrolls), and the Billy Rose Art Garden, designed by Sculptor Isamu Noguchi. The Art Garden already has Billy's own private collection, which Israel finally accepted as a gift last year after deciding that it would...
Ghettos & Genius. For all his aura of patrician wellbeing. Douglas Dillon is only two generations removed from the ghettos of Poland, where Samuel Lapowski. his paternal grandfather, was born. Migrating to Texas after the Civil War. Lapowski set up shop as a clothier, first in San Antonio and later in Abilene, took his mother's maiden name of Dillon, prospered enough to send his only son Clarence to Harvard. Shrewd, smart and blessed with a good poker player's sense of timing, Clarence ("Baron") Dillon was the only boy in his class...
...soldier-boss, Field Marshal Mohammed Ayub Khan, who shares the same jaundiced view of democracy available too soon in a largely illiterate nation. For weeks, Pak and his fellow junta leaders, all soldiers, studied Ayub's techniques and pondered the advice of the new U.S. ambassador in Seoul, Samuel Berger. Berger's practical counsel: Hang on to power if you will, but give the people some timetable for a return of democracy. Pak has done just that. Last week he announced that the reins of government will indeed be handed back to South Korea's civilians...
Newspaper Collector Samuel I. Newhouse knows how to make trouble work for him. In November 1959, the printing-trades unions struck the two daily newspapers in Portland, Ore. They objected to Newhouse's plan to install automatic plate-casting equipment on Portland's biggest and strongest paper, the morning Oregonian (circ. 207,837). And they also struck the afternoon Oregon Journal. For the first 160 days of the strike, the two papers published joint editions; since then have been appearing regularly on their own, though the strike has been going on for 21 months. The Journal has been...