Word: andreas
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Junior captain Julia Moore smashed her opponent Andrea Todaro in three games, 15-10, 15-10, 15-3, at the number one position. Moore, who finished her season with an 11-2 record, will be making the trip to Philadephia, accompanied by number two player Sarah Mleczko and number three Jenny Stone. The fourth player to be entered in the three-round event will be decided in a match this week...
That pensive lady clutching the eerie-looking doll is Susan Blakely in Secrets, ABC's chilling movie scheduled to air Feb. 20. Model-turned-Actress Blakely, 27, plays Andrea, a psychologically disturbed young wife who turns into a nymphomaniac. She is also possessed by the notion that her dead mother is a wicked puppet queen. Her mother's crime? Teaching Andrea that everything she does must be aimed at attracting men. "What the mother teaches the child is almost like the normal belief system many women are taught," observes Blakely. "The plot is something women will connect...
...published in the fall of 1969, the standing committee affirmed the need for the department to consider "not only the. . . black community in the United States, but also its relation, past and present, to the experiences of black people in other parts of the world, especially in Africa". Andrea Rushing, an instructor in the department, commented in 1972: "There is no serious way to discuss the experience of Afro-American without discussing Africa. Afro-Americans did not--like Topsy--just grow on the shores of the New World. The question of emphasis can be argued, but with the dearth...
...stood before me, unleashing a steady barrage of now Andrea True, now Donna Summer, now Natalie Cole. The music abruptly stopped...
...York, Senior Writer Michael Demarest, author of this week's cover story, Staff Writer Andrea Chambers, who wrote the accompanying boxes, and Reporter-Researcher Georgia Harbison soaked up some atmosphere by joining Tompkins in a visit to a local OTB parlor. They emerged unscathed, simply by not placing a bet. Demarest was not always so steel-willed. As a member of TIME'S London bureau in the late 1950s, Demarest closely followed the fortunes of a horse named Four Flusher (gambling argot for cheater), which was jointly owned by a few bureau staffers. "Out of loyalty," Demarest says...