Word: attractants
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Parker anticipated that the new program would attract primarily beginning skiers, novices, and intermediate skiers. He stressed, however, that the program was available to all Harvard undergraduates...
...flattered." However, she is already earning $75,000 a year, and "for $6 a week I get a luxury flat in Moscow and a beautiful country cottage. I have my car, my three fur coats, and I can travel the world whenever I want. The only thing that would attract me to Hollywood," she added demurely, hitching up her skirt for photographers like any Western starlet, "would be a really interesting part...
...problem is that the Harvard Student Agencies has monopolized the ad markets of the Harvard community," Loeffler said. "The H.S.A. Calendar has been able to attract the College's rising young entrepreneurs and as a result the Yearbook has a small business board--a very efficient one, but one whose time and talents are increasingly demanded by the Yearbook itself...
...neglect his state in an effort to attract a national following. We think he is not to be condemned for his aggressive efforts to attract industry and government proects, such as the NASA space center, to Massachusetts...
...pages, young writers early discovered a consistent welcome-a fact due in part to the Atlantic's incapacity to pay rates that would attract established authors. Fifty Grand, the first Hemingway story to be published by a major U.S. magazine, appeared in the Atlantic in 1927-after Cosmopolitan, the Saturday Evening Post, Collier's and Scribner's had turned it down. Unwilling to rely solely on the editorial vision of literary agents, the Atlantic carefully read every unsolicited manuscript, a habit that persists to this day. "We publish more unsolicited material than any other national periodical," says...