Word: maureene
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...mothers who make “cookies and tea.” But the fear of losing support from those women should not make Clinton run from her “First Lady Macbeth” image, crystallized by the New York Times’ Michael Kelly and Maureen Dowd at Mr. Clinton’s first inauguration, in this election cycle. The need to play to Oval Office stereotypes is unfortunate, but I can write these words without reservation because I believe that Mrs. Clinton’s personality fits more with America’s idea...
...squad. Robinson averaged just over nine points per game, but it was her late-game heroics in the final 3:40 that secured a 78-69 win over Cornell on March 3.Robinson, who scored 23 points in an 80-71 home win over the Big Red, and co-captain Maureen McCaffery were the key veterans on a youthful squad with nine freshmen and sophomores. Youth both aided and ailed the Crimson, which trailed at the half in each of its six Ivy losses. Over that stretch, Harvard trailed by an average of eight points going into the second frame...
...energy plan in an hourlong wonkathon at the National Press Club in Washington. As Clinton showed her command of the intricacies of carbon-dioxide sequestration and cellulosic ethanol, it was impossible not to wonder whether the two of them might once again be crowding onto the same turf. Maureen Dowd wrote in the New York Times: "Al Gore must want to punch Hillary Clinton right through the hole in the ozone layer." Gore, however, took pains to tamp down that kind of talk. As he pointed out Chelsea Clinton in the audience at Town Hall last week, he added...
...Maureen F. “Reenie” Moen ’07 had a similar reaction...
...impeachment, needs no footnote from me for its relevance to recent White House history. True, the image of a Vice President with neither power nor notoriety may seem anachronistic, not to say utopian, these days (though at the end, Throttlebottom does say to Wintergreen, in a neat presentiment of Maureen Dowd, "You can be the President and I'll go back to Vice.") But the pertinence of the show's disdain for the motives of the President, the Congress and the press carried a wallop then, and retain a sting today...