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Usage:

...real feeling for hostile profanity, which is about as extreme her as one will find in a general-release movie. Oddly, when it comes to actions rather than words, the sex in tame, sometimes to the point of ab surdity. The most torrid encounter, a moaning simulation of cunnilingus, oc curs with both Portnoy and the Mon key fully clothed - she in pants...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Strictly Nonkosher | 7/3/1972 | See Source »

William Golding looks like every one's favorite uncle, the kind who pulls silver dollars out of your ear and is al ways just back from Tashkent. It oc curs to the reader, as he inspects Golding's wise and mischievous mug on the dust jacket, that no one has pulled silver dollars out of his ear for a long time. It used...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Small Marvels | 2/21/1972 | See Source »

However. Miss Albro said that all interviews at the Harvard OC and CP were open to Radeliffe women. "To encourage Radcliffe students to go to Harvard because I think employers ought to see men and women in the same schedule," she said. "They should know that we have equally qualified men and women for jobs...

Author: By Marion E. Mccollom, | Title: Honeywell's Recruiter Calls Off Interviews; Women Cancel Protest | 3/20/1970 | See Source »

...managed to double the company's profits from $6.6 million in 1966 to $12.2 million last year. In the same period, revenues rose only 18% to $231 million. The chain, which owns, manages or fran chises 67 hotels and inns in 56 U.S. cities, currently has an oc cupancy rate 10% above the industry-wide average of 61%. More remarkable, that occupancy level has been reached despite a 21% advance in Hilton's average room rate from $16.43 to $21.27. On the New York Stock Exchange, Hilton shares have reflected the company's fortunes by leaping from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Corporations: Widening Father's Footsteps | 8/29/1969 | See Source »

...present-day southern France. Its palaces were rich in art and dominated by the codes of courtly love. Its tongue was a strange and musical dialect that had given the region a flourishing literature of poetry and was to give it a name-Languedoc (for langue d'oc, literally, the language...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Devil's Work | 9/6/1963 | See Source »

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