Word: steiner
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...dismissed) to his home in New York City three days later. The Catcher in the Rye became a prodigious bestseller, transfiguring the emotional landscape, the mores and insights of an entire generation. It gave Salinger an abrupt prominence throughout America, Europe. Asia and Africa, and triggered what Critic George Steiner resentfully labeled "the Salinger industry"-a furious parsing of the author's fragile corpus...
...discussions yesterday with Charles P. Whitlock, acting Dean of the College, Dean Dunlop and Daniel Steiner '54, general counsel to the University. Epps said he found that most questions concerned what he termed "practical steps to predict the number of people who would come to the convention and measures to be taken when the predetermined ceiling on attendance is reached...
Died. Max Steiner, 83, longtime movie-score composer; in Hollywood. A Viennese prodigy, Steiner began songwriting and conducting while still a teenager. He migrated to the U.S. in 1914, wrote music and did arrangements for George White and Florenz Ziegfeld, then went to Hollywood in 1930. Of his more than 200 scores, three won Oscars-for The Informer (1935), Now Voyager (1942) and Since You Went Away...
...Csatari, defensive back Jack Manning and place-kicker Ted Perry from Dartmouth; offensive end Jesse Parks and defensive end Mike Evans from Columbia; guard Steve Curtis, defensive tackle Bob Saunders and linebacker Joe Parsons from Princeton; and center Walt Starck, defensive end Mitch Berger and tackle Mark Steiner from Harvard...
Parks, Marinaro, Bjorkland and Jauron all were chosen for a second year and Steiner, Kaliades and Jean moved up from the second team. Leslie, Starck, Jackson, Young, Manning and Colby all advanced from last year's honorable mention list...