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Word: jaye (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...Radcliffe members (the club merged with the Radcliffe Republican Club in the spring of 1966) said last year, "Executive Committee members all look like Midwesterners." A Jewish committee member from New York seems more like the Wyoming rancher Republican than other New Yorkers. And the president of the club, Jay B. Stephens '68, is an earnest Iowan...

Author: By Sandra E. Ravich, | Title: Republican Club: A Quiet 20-Year-Old | 1/16/1968 | See Source »

...written a concerto for duck call. Now the oversight is to be remedied in sensational fashion. Kate has been signed for the title role in next season's Coco, an oversized Broadway musical about Couturiere Coco Chanel that will have a book and lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner, music by Andre Previn, and a tab of $500,000. The musical, gestating since 1959, was supposed to star Rosalind Russell, but she got entangled in movie commitments...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Dec. 22, 1967 | 12/22/1967 | See Source »

Williams got strong performances from it four senior starters, led by 6'7" Bill Unterecker with 24 points and captain Jay Healy with...

Author: By Richard D. Paisner, | Title: Williams College Squad Smashes Cagers, 74-59; Full Court Press Fails | 12/13/1967 | See Source »

Cummins' victory set the stage for the final relay. Harvard coach Bill Brooks put Pete Adams, Dan Thompson, John Bragg, and Bill Shrout on the line against Army's powerful four. Adams and Thompson opened up a lead of one body length which Bragg lost to Army's speedy Jay Williams. Shrout hit the water even with Cadet Heesch. Heesch, like Shrout, had won two freestyle events earlier. But for the relay Heesch was rested while Shrout was still tired from the gruelling 500-yard freestyle, two events before...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cadets Sink Swim Team | 12/11/1967 | See Source »

Dean Gitter as Jay Gould gives Prince Erie's most extraordinary performance. A quiet nervous deadpan conveys the tension and ruthlessness of Gould, who could "smell a nickel under twenty pounds of lard." Through disciplined underplaying, Gitter is tragic in the steamboat scene, and satanic at the end of the second act where, after the success of the gold crash, he drinks a glass of champagne in spine-chilling slow motion...

Author: By Tim Hunter, | Title: Prince Erie | 12/8/1967 | See Source »

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