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Word: straitjackets (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...GREW UP IN LONDON. WHY DID YOU START RESTAURANTS IN NEW YORK CITY? I find England stifling. I wish I could enjoy it, but I can't. When there, I feel I'm in a straitjacket. It's probably to do with the class system...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 10 Questions for Keith McNally | 4/17/2007 | See Source »

...their services are needed and they are willing to provide them.The new system’s success also depends largely on the availability of a broad array of departmental alternatives to its foundational courses. Unless there is considerable latitude in selecting classes, the new system will be a straitjacket for students—just like the Core. Yet the current legislation implementing the proposal does not ensure such choice. It will be up to the new dean to lead the way in policing the system so that exemptions and departmental alternatives are the rule and not the exception.Beyond...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: The Dean and his Program | 4/15/2007 | See Source »

...Done right, the new labor flexibility could have been a boon for Japanese workers as well as companies. While lifetime corporate employment might be secure - especially compared to the unstable lot of workers in the U.S. - in practice it can feel like a straitjacket. Employees in Japan are often still paid by seniority, not by performance, and switching companies in mid-career can mean career suicide. Part-timers have the potential to pick their jobs, be rewarded for skills rather than seniority and be spared the 90-hour workweeks that drive many salarymen to an early grave. In Haken, Haruko...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Indignity of the Temp | 3/2/2007 | See Source »

...strips and graphic novels - and as both an artist and an entrepreneur, for more than six decades. TIME.com maven Andrew Arnold calls him "one of comix' greatest forward-thinkers." In the biz from his teens (everybody started young in comics), Eisner wanted to break out of the newspaper-illustration straitjacket, saying, "A daily strip to me is like trying to conduct an orchestra in a telephone booth." So at 23, on June 2, 1940, he introduced The Spirit, which ran as a separate comic book in the Sunday papers - an eight-page symphony, if you will. Not a graphic novel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Does Mad Need a Museum? | 2/3/2007 | See Source »

...Elvis shimmied, Little Richard wailed, Jerry Lee Lewis smashed the piano stool and played the keys with his feet, and all helped liberate pop culture from the straitjacket of propriety. Rock ?n roll made them move like that. But those three had a guitar or piano to play or play with or hide behind. Brown had played the piano and other instruments, but onstage they?d just slow him down. He needed his hands and legs free to prowl, keep the band pumped up, work the crowd into a practiced frenzy. For 50 years, he was a full-service entertainer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Appreciation: James Brown | 12/26/2006 | See Source »

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