I can proudly say, without exaggeration, thai this is also true of me. — Roger W. Smith December 2024 Share! Twitter Reddit LinkedIn Like this:LikeLoading... This entry was posted inmiscellaneous; general interestand taggedBoswell Life of Johnson Samuel Johnson,Roger Smith,Roger W. SmithonDe...
Le Roy Ladurie Braudel Braudel Posted here (above) — both as Word documents and PDFs — are four articles which I wrote for the reference bookCurrent Biography: Chaim Potok novelist Current Biography, May 1983 A.J.P. Taylor historian Current Biography, November 1983 Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie ...
While the estate is registered as anégociant-manipulant, no grapes are purchased, and all of the wines are entirely estate-grown. This was served as an aperitif. At $72 Ed said this was a real bargain. Ed divided the Champagne into three flights to accompany the food. Christina Jacobs w...
“too much space.” That means too much emotional space, I guess; nobody ever has too much closet space. She lives in Chicago with a real estate developer (Charles Grodin), and they give one another so much freedom they hardly seem to share a commitment. ...
As “Things We Lost in the Fire” opens, Audrey was married for 11 years to Brian Burke (David Duchovny, seen in several flashbacks), and they were happy years, giving her two children, now 10 and 6, and a big house in an upscale suburb. Brian was a “genius” at real estate deal...
The Watergate affair began with the arrest of five men for breaking into the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate complex in June 1972. The actual damage done by the break-in was negligible. But, the deepening scandal revealed a pattern of abuses of power by the Nixon ...
”) The plot is made-up of the bits and pieces of what might have been sitcom storylines. The Bradys overlooked paying their real estate taxes, and now they stand to lose their idyllic home on Clinton Way. For the neighbors, that’s just fine; Mr. Ditmeyer has plans to raze the ...
On Saturday mornings, he would go to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He would begin in the cafeteria, nursing a cup of coffee and lost in thought. He said that for him the museum was like a cathedral. It had that effect on him mentally. Either explicitly or implicitly, he was also th...
See also: Thomas Smith and Jane (Gilchrist) Smith, from Scotland to Boston, MA, 1872 Thomas Smith (1837-1902) Jane (Gilchrist) Smith (1834-1907) Thomas Smith, Jr. (1861-1894) and Jennie (Wright) (Smith) Simpson (1863-1948)