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...manners, will host. The Twentieth Century has made one of TV's most extensive film searches to document great events and personalities: Winston Churchill, Douglas MacArthur, the German V-2 rocket, the Nürnberg trials, the love story of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, and Don Whitehead's version of the FBI story. Globetrotter Lowell Thomas brings seven color adventure films back from New Guinea, Nepal, the Arctic, South Seas and Yucatan: and Conquest will showcase "breakthroughs" in science. After six years on TV, Lucy and Desi are taking refuge in five hour-long musical comedies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TV & Radio: The New Shows | 9/2/1957 | See Source »

...being promotion manager for Foreign Affairs. Seen on a midtown Manhattan street, tall, lean, blue-eyed Tanner decked in a midnight-blue Homburg, with umbrella tightly furled, could still pass for a refugee from the British Foreign Office. Though Pat's grey-flecked brown beard predates Commander "Schweppes" Whitehead's ambassadorship (Tanner grew his during a wartime stint as ambulance driver with the American Field Service attached to the French army), he and the commander have done some mutual theorizing in and on their beards: "The beard flourishes whenever there is a Queen on the throne of England...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Hairy Jape | 7/15/1957 | See Source »

Chief among the founders of the Society were President A. Lawrence Lowell '77, Lawrence J. Henderson '98, professor of Chemistry, Alfred North Whitehead, professor of Philosophy, John Livingston Lowes, professor of English, and Charles P. Curtis Jr. '14, a Boston lawyer and a member of the Corporation...

Author: By John P. Demos, | Title: Society of Fellows | 5/9/1957 | See Source »

...Whitehead's Conclusions...

Author: By John P. Demos, | Title: Society of Fellows | 5/9/1957 | See Source »

Henderson afterwards recalled developing his ideas in conversation with Whitehead. "He (Whithead) reached a number of conclusions of which the most important was that the success of the Trinity Fellows depends on two kinds of factors: (1) the benefits conferred directly upon the individual by stipend, lodgings, freedom from routine or required tasks, and so forth, and (2) the benefits of association with others, including men of widely different interests and activities." The Committee of Four felt that these central principles of the Trinity system should form the core of any similar program at Harvard...

Author: By John P. Demos, | Title: Society of Fellows | 5/9/1957 | See Source »

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