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Word: banqueteers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

Robert L. Pillsbury '61, a tackle, has been selected by his teammates as the most valuable player on the 1960 varsity football team. Pillsbury, of Winthrop House and Wollaston, received the Frederick Greely Crocker Award, emblematic of the MVP honor, at the annual Harvard Club of Boston banquet for the team last night...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Pillsbury Selected Football MVP; McLaughlin Wins LaCroix Award | 11/23/1960 | See Source »

...Coolidge Club followed the course and metamorphosed Republican Club in time for congressional race. Lodge, patting in both the Conservation and the Republican Club the G.O.P. group in his at the College. Arthur to combe '06, Eaton Professor Science of Government, But remembers sitting next to a Republican Club banquet discussing politics with was a natural for a political Holcombe comment. "He name, personality, incentive money...

Author: By Mary ELLEN Gale, | Title: Lodge at Harvard: Loyal Conservation 'Who Knew Just What He Wanted to Do. | 11/4/1960 | See Source »

...tails, he seemed so comfortable that Nixon was moved to comment that whichever man won the election would outlaw the agony of full dress. In his speech, Kennedy produced some spirited quips. Only the host, Francis Cardinal Spellman, he said, could have brought together at the same banquet table two political leaders "who have long eyed each other suspiciously and who have disagreed so strongly, both publicly and privately-Vice President Nixon and Governor Rockefeller." He went on to crack to this knowledgeable audience that Casey Stengel's firing was proof that "perhaps experience doesn't count...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DEMOCRATS: Jaunty Candidate | 10/31/1960 | See Source »

...This is the man I would vote for as President," boomed Toastmaster Roger Main, a banker and Democrat, at a banquet in Jacksonville, Fla. "But since he is not a candidate, I intend to vote for his candidate." Up rose the audience to give a standing ovation to the toastmaster's hero, Republican Senator Barry Morris Goldwater of Arizona.* In mostly Democratic Jacksonville, many Democrats were among the 500 who had paid $25 each into the Republican campaign fund to hear Goldwater tell them to vote for Dick Nixon. In dozens of other cities and hamlets from South Carolina...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLITICAL NOTES: Conservative Crusader | 10/17/1960 | See Source »

...West Side (Seventh Avenue between 52nd and 53rd Streets) for a new Loew's hotel, to be called the Americana of New York. It will be the world's tallest hotel (50 stories) and one of its largest (2,000 rooms) and most luxurious, with restaurants and banquet halls that can feed 6,800 people at a sitting, and a private automobile elevator direct to the grand ballroom...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Man About Hotels: LAURENCE ALAN TISCH | 10/10/1960 | See Source »

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