Word: chaptered
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...unique capacity to write about complex issues in a way that children can understand," said Rachel Polinar, a member of the chapter...
...would guess that one of the groups very strongly affected would be community health organizations often concerned with treating AIDS patients," says Jed D. Kolko '92, a member of the Boston chapter of the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power...
Members of the Boston chapter of Educators for Social Responsibility praised Seuss for his talent at tackling difficult topics in a way that entertains and is understandable to his young readers...
...shoes and socks and your pants -- and get into the tub and try to get the blood out of the stuff I throw in there." With her lover Howard Hughes, two of the skinniest eccentrics of our time, she dives naked off the wing of his seaplane. In a chapter about another beau, the agent Leland Hayward, Hepburn talks about living in Los Angeles' Coldwater Canyon, living in Benedict Canyon, finding a snake in her living room, buying real estate and embarrassing a young doctor at lunch. And that's the story of Leland Hayward. There is also a recipe...
Still, Memoirs is not all misanthropy and -ogyny. Amis gives a generous portrait of his shy, witty fellow Oxonian, the poet Philip Larkin, who like the author had to endure that most mannered of academic dons, Lord David Cecil. One sprightly chapter contains a mercilessly comic imitation of a lisping Cecil pointlessly beginning a lecture. ("When we say a man looks like a poet . . . dough mean . . . looks like Chauthah?") Cecil had the ill grace to flunk Amis for his B. Litt. thesis, but the author uncharacteristically lets bygones be. Perhaps it's too hard to stay angry with someone...