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Word: pamela (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Usage:

Marriage tattoos, like vows, are not to be taken lightly, lest they outlive the unions they celebrate. Consider those worn on the ring fingers of rocker TOMMY LEE and his pneumatic spouse PAMELA ANDERSON. The Baywatch staple is divorcing the man she wed on a beach 21 months ago, after a relationship that had stood the test of five days' time. Their marriage produced one son Brandon and a slew of photographs of the happy couple kissing. The two had recently been in court trying to stop distribution of a video of their more intimate activities, which they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Dec. 2, 1996 | 12/2/1996 | See Source »

...Crimson article mentioned that the audience was "predominantly female"; obviously a lot of women were drawn not by Gibson's intellect but his sex appeal. What's next? Will Pamela Anderson Lee be invited to talk about how grueling those "Baywatch" shoots are, so hundreds of Harvard's male under-graduates can ogle and drool? This is supposed to be Harvard University, the finest school in this hemisphere, if not the world. It has been host to many speakers of first-rate intellect who came to impart their knowledge and wisdom to the students. Mel Gibson doesn't belong here...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mel Gibson's Speech Lacked Any Semblance of Intellectual Content | 11/18/1996 | See Source »

...Schuster; 559 pages; $30), reads as if it had written itself. That, of course, is a hard-earned illusion. The former New York Times reporter and author of a book about Paley has dredged decades of letters, memoirs, social histories and newspaper clippings. She has talked to hundreds of Pamela watchers and has had the benefit of reading Christopher Ogden's Life of the Party, a 1994 biography based on taped interviews Harriman gave Ogden and then prevented him from quoting directly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: THE WOMAN MOST LIKELY TO | 11/11/1996 | See Source »

...provided--sometimes simultaneously--the residences, the antiques, the designer frocks and the sort of pin money only Cartier understands. As Averell Harriman's wife and widow, she became a patron of defeated Democrats, opening her house to promising politicians, Bill Clinton among them. According to the numbers, Pamela Harriman was an effective party fund raiser, although not an especially generous contributor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: THE WOMAN MOST LIKELY TO | 11/11/1996 | See Source »

Money and power, not love and marriage, are the dominant themes of this brightly written book. The bottom line is that Pamela Churchill Harriman knew how to get money but not how to keep it. In the 1950s she made a virtue of her extravagance. "My life has given me a unique opportunity to shop," she once told a fashion reporter. Forty years later, following a decade of big spending and bad investments, she was selling off prime assets from the Harriman estate to meet expenses. Her biggest fear, notes one of Bedell Smith's many loquacious sources, was that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: THE WOMAN MOST LIKELY TO | 11/11/1996 | See Source »

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