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Word: whiskeys (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...story concerns a whiskey-soaked, carousing mother and the young daughter, Jo, whom she has been dragging around from flophouse to flophouse. The mother decides to have another fling at marriage and leaves the girl (whom in a more profound sense she had deserted long ago). Left alone, Jo seeks love like a child, and finds it with a Negro sailor who soon must leave. Alone again, Jo is attended by a young homosexual who is almost capable of loving her in a limited sense, but again in a futile one. The mother returns to find her daughter...

Author: By Frederick H. Gardner, | Title: Broadway Theatre | 12/20/1960 | See Source »

...Midwesterners as New Jersey's Governor Robert Meyner and Oregon's Wayne Morse. The smiling face of Senate Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson beamed from posters in the hotel corridors, with arrows underneath pointing to the suite where a hospitable supply of Jack Daniel's whiskey flowed. Moreover, sagacious House Speaker Sam Rayburn, 78, was on hand to exploit every advantage for Fellow Texan Johnson...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE CAMPAIGN: The Smell of Battle | 4/4/1960 | See Source »

...suggestion that Penn, for all its efforts, is still the school of the Ivy look and the organization man. "The 'Ivy League look' is the business--an awful phrase," Pitt maintains. "In fact, Dean Bender of Harvard wrote the Ivy admissions directors a letter offering a bottle of whiskey for the man who could think of a new name." Pitt tries to prove his point by quoting students who usually complain that "there are not enough people like themselves, rather than the reverse." Yet, if the students themselves seem to prefer homogenity to heterogeneity, Pitt's argument loses its validity...

Author: By Michael S. Lottman, | Title: Pennsylvania Balances Actuality Against Hope of Valued Learning | 10/30/1959 | See Source »

Scouts in the Whiskey. By mid-1958, The Whiskey Distillers of Ireland, who wanted to make a bigger dent in the U.S. market, were in the fold. Weiner & Gossage started an Irish campaign that featured ads ending in midsentence, sniffed at the Brazilian coffee bean (because Irish coffee obscured the burnished flavor of Irish whiskey), extolled St. Patrick's Day in Mexico City. In the interest of scientific experiment ("Irish whiskey research in nature's laboratory"), Gossage dreamed up the Irish Geophysical Year, to be held in McMurdo Sound...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ADVERTISING: The Kooksters | 10/26/1959 | See Source »

...many letters (each personally answered) poured in to Ireland's Whiskey Distillers that Gossage claims to have "established an important new industry in Ireland-writing letters to America." Says he: "If you write in and say you don't drink Irish, we may send your name to a man who does. It will be like the buddy system, like boy scouts helping each other to swim." Irish whiskey sales in the U.S.? Up 60% in the first nine months of this year, to 30,000 cases...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ADVERTISING: The Kooksters | 10/26/1959 | See Source »

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