Word: organism
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Anyone who is considering purchasing a piano or organ will be misled by your article. Foreign imports such as Yamaha and Kawai are not better values than the Wurlitzer. I have sold Wurlitzer products for 20 years, as well as more than 40 other brands, including Japanese and Korean models. No other manufacturer has maintained the consistent high quality of Wurlitzer...
...take them back. . . and refund the money paid for them." Richard Sears began his catalogue in 1888, and only a few years later was mailing millions of the "Consumer's Guides." Some of the goods promoted in the print-crammed folios look good today. How about a parlor organ...
...pure art for art's sake" approach. In "First Flowering. The Best of the Harvard Advocate," editor Edward Smoley describes the gradual withdrawal from issues of university-wide relevance that post-World War II board members effected. "The Advocate editors were becoming a literary clique, the magazine their house organ. They showed little interest in student affairs," he writes. During the 60s and 70s, the emphasis shifted towards more artwork and a slicker presentation. James Atlas '72, an ex-Advocate president and a current editor of the Atlantic, remembers trying to improve circulation by putting a young woman with bare...
...Editor Thomas Pryor literally had a wall constructed between the business and editorial areas to discourage advertising salesmen from trying to influence coverage of their clients. "If you print something worthwhile, you get respected," says Pryor, 70, editor since 1959. "If you don't, you become a house organ." In fact, while both papers yearn to be taken seriously as tough, independent journalistic enterprises (and both have shown grit and knowledge in covering events like the ouster in July of embattled United Artists Chairman David Begelman), Daily Variety, founded in 1933, can more justly claim a tradition of shrewd...
OFCOURSE what got lost in the shuffle was that the distinctive organ sound overshadowed some very deep rock roots and sensibilities. That acid tongue blighted some very heartfelt emotions and a sophisticated political consciousness Costello understands, as the Clash never will, that political involvement must start on a very personal level, in one's own "Hoover Factory," not in a helter-skelter call for a "White Riot."). Or that grating voice obscured a sincerity hard to find in rock today. But that's what the cliche to which he bound himself--"continued anger," as he recently...