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Word: butterly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Without the need for full mobilization, non-war and non-security expenditures will increase next year, though only at a modest 2 percent. The dismal fiscal and economic environment that followed the Vietnam War should be enough to alert anyone to the dangers of loading up on guns and butter...

Author: By James A. Waters, JAMES A. WATERS | Title: An Honest Budget Debate | 2/15/2002 | See Source »

After a few seconds, he’s enthralled. “It drives like butter,” he exclaims. She scolds him not to get a taste for any more luxuries. The once-forbidden German-made is looking more and more like the car of his future. Maybe he’ll have to lease...

Author: By Lauren R. Dorgan and David H. Gellis, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERSS | Title: Ride Wit' Me | 2/7/2002 | See Source »

...Mikhaela B. Reid ’02 is a social anthropology concentrator in Mather House and the former design editor of Diversity & Distinction magazine. She loves: The Boondocks, Tom Tomorrow’s This Modern World, the Dead Kennedys, the Coup, Sherman Alexie, sewing magazines, peanut butter and trashy science fiction novels. She dislikes: Cathy (the comic strip), Barbie (the doll) and political cartoons about donkeys and elephants. She loathes with every fiber of her being: George W. Bush and his co-conspirators...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Editorial Board of The Harvard Crimson is Pleased To Announce its Cartoonists for the Spring Term | 1/31/2002 | See Source »

...rain in a fortnight by smelling the tree moss. Jane thought of leaving it all and getting a job in town but realized that she would only be happy standin’ by her man on the ranch/farm… After all, who else would feed the little butter-colored chicks every morning...

Author: By Antoinette C. Nwandu, | Title: See Jane. See Jane Sit. | 1/23/2002 | See Source »

...died in 1978. There were quite a few reasons for well-thinking folk of a conventionally radical disposition not to take him seriously. One: he was a figurative painter. Two: he and his wife Dora Zaslavsky, a noted piano coach, were reasonably well off from his bread-and-butter work of portraiture (which, wisely, is not allowed to dominate this show), and they lived in a big flat overlooking Central Park, surrounded by antique furniture, bibelots and old paintings, some genuine and some not, which he liked to include in his own canvases. (Sometimes he would make up the paintings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: A World Of Grownups | 1/14/2002 | See Source »

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