Word: joe
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Joe Barton and Pete Wood scored quick markers at the close of the opening period, but six straight Rutgers goals in the second quarter gave the Knights a 10-2 lead that the varsity never overcame. Six of the Crimson's ten goals came from the midfield with Wood, Barton, and Joey Prahl leading...
...Obvious Man. After the election, Smith briefly held a State Department job, accompanied Vice President Johnson on a round-the-world trip. When old Joe Kennedy suffered a stroke in December 1961, Smith moved to New York to oversee some Kennedy financial enterprises. But last summer he turned up again in Boston-this time to lend his now mature experience to ironing out the wrinkles in Teddy Kennedy's victorious senatorial campaign...
...attaches particular blame to Mr. Burke and not, as would be proper, the whole corporation. What the CRIMSON means, one has to conclude, is that there just has to be something wrong, some touch of guilt, when a case is brought to law to settle a dispute. This is Joe McCarthy stuff. In our society the rule among honest men is to wait the decision of the court...
Unfortunately, despite several fine performances, the film has little to recommend it. The story is all too familiar. Lemmon plays Joe Clay, a bright, young, agreeable, on-the-rise public relations man--a role he played in The Apartment. The requirements of his job lead him to compromise his principles, as in The Apartment. "I want to be a public relations man," he tells his girlfriend (Lee Remick) glumly, "not a pimp...
...Apartment, Days is shallow and over-simplified. Caricature is substituted for character. "Let's full it out of a hat," says Joe Clay's boss, "and see if it stops." Although Lemmon and Remick are convincing performers, their roles are crippled with cliches, and become not universal, but superficial. "Do you know why I've lost five jobs in the last four years?" Lemmon complains. "No why?" saks Remick. "Booze," says Lemmon...