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Word: slave (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...resting in the posh basement office retained for the highly influential post of Ibis of the Harvard Lampoon, still cursing myself for failing to massage the buttocks of enough people to guarantee my presidency of the humor magazine, I was disturbed by the incessant noise of our galley-slave dragging his lead ball and chains ever closer to my door...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Clip and Save: Excerpts From the Upcoming Lampoon-Chaparral Collaboration | 3/5/1987 | See Source »

Afro-American writing was the slave narrative

Author: By Maia E. Harris, | Title: SCRUTINY | 2/26/1987 | See Source »

...year is young, but it is unlikely that any title in 1987 will top this one for mystification and intrigue. Fair enough: its subjects are the oddest achievers in the history of show business. Here is Blind Tom, born to slave parents in 1849. Sightless and retarded, this exemplary idiot savant could play most pieces on the piano, classical or popular, after a single hearing. Here is Harry Kahne, who could write five words on a blackboard simultaneously, holding chalk in his feet, hands and mouth. Here is Matthew Buchinger, who was a marksman, conjurer, artist and musician. Not exactly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bookends: Feb. 9, 1987 | 2/9/1987 | See Source »

...recent article ("California Contradiction," January 14) is a perfect example of how sympathy untempered by reason can lead to irresponsible conclusions. Her sympathy was aroused by observation during a Christmas stay in Southern California of the predominance of Mexicans in subservient, low-paying jobs. This, she says, is "slave labor...

Author: By Eric GOULIAN L, | Title: MAIL: | 2/7/1987 | See Source »

...Grossman had traveled down the coast thirty miles to the homeland of these immigrants, she might have understood why so many of them willingly cross the border for the opportunity to perform "slave labor." There, in Tijuana, she would have seen not workers picking oranges for a few dollars an hour, but people begging for food; not housekeepers living in the "slave" quarters of fancy homes, but wretched families living in cardboard shacks that wash away in the winter floods; not gardeners driving beat-up Chevy's, but beat-up human beings for whom the prospect of owning...

Author: By Eric GOULIAN L, | Title: MAIL: | 2/7/1987 | See Source »

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