He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1982 to the Ninety-eighth Congress, a victim of redistricting and negative campaigning by Robert Torricelli, who unseated him by a 54% to 46% margin.
Harold Pinter | Harold Wilson | Harold Macmillan | Harold Bloom | Harold Godwinson | Harold Lloyd | Harold Stassen | Harold Prince | J. Harold Ellens | Harold Holt | Sir Harold Hillier Gardens | Harold Washington | Harold Hitz Burton | Harold Alexander, 1st Earl Alexander of Tunis | Harold Peto | Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle | Harold Arlen | Harold | Harold Budd | Harold Eugene Edgerton | Harold Bauer | Harold von Schmidt | Harold Robbins | Harold Laski | Harold Gould | Harold Gillies | Harold Bradley | Harold Alexander | Harold Acton | Harold Scott MacDonald Coxeter |
In 1969, Harold Fleming proposed that what had previously been known as Western Cushitic is an independent branch of Afroasiatic, suggesting for it the new name Omotic.
•
Harold Fleming (2006) proposes that Ongota constitutes a separate branch of Afroasiatic.
The concept is due to Harold C. Fleming (1987), who proposed such a "mega-super-phylum" for the languages of Eurasia, termed Borean or Boreal in Fleming (1991) and later publications.
The Pulitzer Prize-winning music critic Harold C. Schonberg wrote of Lipatti's 1947–48 Chopin concert recordings: "this is piano-playing of a stature that few artists of his generation could have come near approaching".
He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1934 to the Seventy-fourth Congress and for election in 1936 to the Seventy-fifth Congress.
Schonberg was highly critical of Leonard Bernstein during the composer-conductor's eleven-year tenure (1958–69) as principal conductor of the New York Philharmonic.
•
A devoted and skilled chess player, he covered the championship match between Boris Spassky and Bobby Fischer in Reykjavík, Iceland in 1972.
, The Feminist Companion to the Bible, 6 (Sheffield, UK: Sheffield Academic Press, 2000), 41-58.
The Harold C. Bold award, established in 1973, the Bold Award is given for the outstanding graduate student paper(s) presented at the Annual Meeting as determined by the Bold Award Committee.
In 1933, he moved to Columbia University to join the department of Biological Chemistry and worked with David Rittenberg, from the radiochemistry laboratory of Harold C. Urey, later together with Konrad Bloch, using stable isotopes to tag foodstuffs and trace their metabolism within living things.
Schonberg, Harold C., The Great Pianists (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1987, 1963).