Word: pails
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...Labels don't do justice to the division of opinion," he says. "You have lunch-pail Democrats, Reagan Democrats who are very liberal on economic issues but tend to be social conservatives...
Glenn S. Koocher '71, a Cambridge political analyst, described the 1996 showdown between Galluccio and Wolf as a "classic town-versus-gown" election. The race pits Galluccio, "the lunch-pail democrat" against Wolf, "the limousine liberal," quipped Koocher, who hosts a local public-access television show on city politics...
Higginbotham teaches in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and the Law School, in addition to the Kennedy School of Government. He has previously held a number of judicial posts and is currently of counsel to the law firm of Pail, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton and Garrison in the New York and Washington offices...
...most Minneapolitans, St. Paul is an inexplicable growth on their eastern flank, their New Jersey, their Pasadena, the place you don't go if you're hip, and those people are heavily into hipness. At Walker Art Center, the custodial staff has to be careful not to leave a pail and a mop unattended during exhibition hours lest it attract a crowd of Minneapolitans struck by the angularity of the thing, the openness, the vocabulary of liquidity. Minneapolis, not St. Paul, is a mecca for performance artists, people who can't sing or dance or write...
...support risky adventures abroad. That is a role Albright has long auditioned for from the U.N.; she'll step in as the CNN Secretary of State that Christopher never wanted to be. She is the master of the sound bite, explaining complex issues in 10-second phrases that lunch-pail Americans can understand. She became famous for searing one-liners against dictators like Saddam Hussein and corrupt Haitian generals. "You can leave voluntarily and soon or involuntarily and soon," she told the junta...