Word: expression
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...will be taking on a new assignment as chairman of Time Inc.'s Magazine Group, acting as senior adviser to Kelso Sutton, the group's president. Before moving on, I want to express my appreciation to everyone who has contributed to TIME's success. When I took over in 1978, worldwide ad revenues were $208 million; the total this year will approach $500 million, the highest ever recorded by any magazine. U.S. circulation has increased by 350,000 in the past four years to 4.6 million; around the world, circulation is almost 6 million. That is 32 million readers each...
...obviate the problem of the unwanted and embarassing gift album, you need only to express definite and immutable musical preferences before your loved ones go out to squander their money on something that will make you the laughingstock of your school, church or place of employment. You should be firm: inform your particular nuclear unit that you will douse the tree with water, short-circuit the lights and burn down the living room if you do not get what you want. It's best to ask for a lot of records because the stores sometimes run out, leaving you again...
...Crimson has every right to express its liberal opinions straight out of the Dark Ages. But you should draw the line at deliberate insults aimed at individual students or at attempts to distort the facts so as to ridicule undergraduate organizations. I found your latest foray in the former category, in which you referred to me as "SyKahane," deeply offensive. Meier Kahane is a militant racist who has called for the expulsion or extermination of Arab Moslems in Israel. As a Moslem and a national from the Middle East, I find the label of Kahane comparable to referring...
...stepped back into the storm at 6:00 p.m. on Monday. My girlfriend, a sophomore at William and Mary, had given me a ride to Norfolk so I could catch a cheap People Express flight to Boston...
Individual students can make a difference. The clubs can no longer be accepted as benign vestiges of Harvard's aristocratic past. Students should express dismay when they find out that a friend is considering joining a club. Women should stop accepting the status quo and should refuse to enter clubs which by their very existence encourage demeaning and sexist attitudes. Present members should resign from the clubs because of the clubs' immoral foundations...