Word: hottest
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...having trouble getting his new musical Mad About Mintz produced by Radcliffe Grant-in-Aid. Under the society's auspices, Mintz finally made it onto the Agassiz stage, and the rest is Harvard theater history. Last year the Premiere Society sponsored what turned out to be the hottest show in town: Do It Yourself, a collage of skits and songs written by Harvard students and Paul Cantor, who normally hosts a show of his own in Hum 118. Do It Yourself was a real bonanza; night after night, the Lowell House JCR veritably creaked with Harvard notables crushed together...
...steps behind these letters in guaranteeing a seat in a glamorous law firm, but they usually dictate where and how a healthy part of each student's time and money will be spent for a year. It's no surprise that these white mimeographed sheets are some of the hottest items floating around campus during the first week of classes...
...wide-toothed bone comb in one hand and a flaming 10-in. jeweler's torch in the other, was preparing to go to work, while cooing assurances that "it isn't nearly as bad as it smells." It turns out to be the blowtorch cut, the hottest innovation in California coiffure circles since Warren Beatty in Shampoo...
...lighted discotheques around the U.S., the beautiful people, and some not so beautiful, dance the night and morning away to a loud, seamless stream of glossily recorded rhythm-and-blues songs. Disco has become not only an energetic way to play the mating game but also one of the hottest subindustries in the popular-entertainment field. In terms of the hit singles that can now be made, the stereo and quad equipment that can be peddled to the club owners, and the crowds that can be drawn in at $5 or more a head, disco is a multimillion-dollar business...
While short on professionalism in many cases, the security firms are quick to mine new markets for their services. Hottest growth area at present: executive protection. By some official measures, businessmen are fading as targets of violence in the U.S.* Yet security companies report rising demand for providing top corporate officers with bodyguards and teaching executives how to avoid kidnapers and extortioners...