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...have place at all," Bernice Reagon 'Matriarch Blues...

Author: By Alta Starr, | Title: Tryin' To Make It Real | 3/8/1973 | See Source »

...Young Americans for Freedom made an award to Goldwater after his speech, naming him "Man of the Decade" (along with William F. Buckley and Ronald Reagon, who didn't attend the convention) and giving him a book of letters from well-wishers and a portrait of himself. The portrait, painted from a photograph taken just after he had returned from a fishing trip, shows the familiar face topped by a skipper's cap and looking unusually rugged under several day's growth of beard...

Author: By William S. Beckett, | Title: 10 Candles for YAF Barry Goldwater Day and a Visit from Strom Thurmond | 10/21/1970 | See Source »

...Reagon occasionally expresses a curious sympathy for student radicals. "I worry about the students who get lost in a big University like Berkeley," Reagan said this summer. "I went to a small school myself. Everyone there had to get involved. I can imagine the appeal some of these university student groups must have. For the first time someone is reaching out and saying: "We want...

Author: By T. JAY Mathews, | Title: Reagan and Berkeley | 11/23/1966 | See Source »

...Kuczynski, Penn 6 19 4 10 .526 Pearson, Princeton 4 13 4 6 .462 Hain, Penn 6 16 7 7 .438 Burns, Dartmouth 3 14 2 6 .429 Stillman, Cornell 6 23 4 9 .391 Besse, Yale 4 13 2 5 .385 Pill, Columbia 6 24 6 9 .375 Reagon, Penn 6 24 7 9 .375 Bufalino, Cornell 6 19 6 7 .368 Beinstein, Penn 6 25 4 9 .360 Carton, Yale 4 15 3 5 .333 Clay, Harvard 5 15 2 5 .333 Wood, Yale...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Baseball Ratings | 5/7/1941 | See Source »

...Shuffle Along. In Philadelphia, fame came to her one evening when she lost her shoe, did an impromptu cooch dance with her eyes crossed. It brought her back to New York and a two-year job in the Broadway company of the same show. In 1925 a Mrs. Reagon, vaudeville booking agent, offered Josephine $250 a week to go to Paris. With the exception of a disastrous attempt to reinvade Broadway in 1936, Josephine Baker has remained in Europe ever since. Parisians loved her shrill, piping soprano, her lacquered hair and extravagant clothes, her habit of dancing nude...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: Shotgun Wedding | 12/13/1937 | See Source »

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