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Word: execs (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Educational Resources Group, CUE; Committee on Undergraduate Instruction; Exec. Comm., HRC; House Comm; Editor, Trunkline; PBH legal Committee; Radcliffe Choral Society; Harvard Dramatic Club; Harvard Cheerleader; Junior Day Comm.; MIT-Harvard-Wellesley Flying Club; Longy School of Music; Women's Self-Government Assan...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Candidates for the Radcliffe 1976 Class Committee/For Class Marshal | 5/7/1975 | See Source »

...humor this time lies in the narrator's calm assumption that these hideosities, and others, are quite normal. Emma's eleven-year-old son has changed, for no clear reason, from a bright little boy into a neurotic homunculus. Her husband, slyly cast as a successful publishing exec, is an insane hypochondriac and grunting lecher. Worst of all, her cheerful, friendly black maid, who quit some time ago to start a catering business, is hired to run one of Emma's dinner parties and turns up utterly transmogrified into a hostile militant...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Fun City | 1/21/1974 | See Source »

...went in the back door and walked up the back stairs and weren't seen in the front of the building. Okay, where was The Crimson when this was going on? But more to my point, where were women on The Crimson? In 1965 during Linda McVeigh Matthew's exec. comp. the Harvard football team held its annual dinner here in this very building. That was during the week she was trial sports editor and she showed up to cover it, and of course they didn't let her in. Did we raise a fuss and threaten to boycott...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Women on the Paper; the Late Sixties Pinko-Rag | 1/24/1973 | See Source »

...however, the t.j.s have little in common. Though they usually try to create the impression that they are young and sexy, several, like Ballance, are 50 or more. Few have completed college, and most started out on small stations where they were heard by a dial-hopping big-city exec...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: The New Talk Jockeys | 5/22/1972 | See Source »

With three heavy money-rakers under his belt, he has boldly re-emerged into media athletics--to the extent that a Warner Brothers exec has resigned due to Kubrick's authoritarian control of his latest picture's release. Unfortunately, A Clockwork Orange makes the director's now-famous integrity seem like that of the repentant Chasids, who chased back to God by bricking themselves into a 4x5 hovel with nothing but a palette, a Bible, and the sky above them. Bigger-hearted men carve out their own living communities and bring back McCabe and Mrs. Miller, or, better still...

Author: By Michael Sragow, | Title: Kubrick in Context | 3/16/1972 | See Source »

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