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Date:      Mon, 22 Dec 2003 10:12:39 -0800
From:      underway@comcast.net (Gary W. Swearingen)
To:        Andrew Boothman <andrew@cream.org>
Cc:        chat@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: More trivia: origin of the wheel group
Message-ID:  <u0oeu090x4.eu0@mail.comcast.net>
In-Reply-To: <3FE646A3.6080907@cream.org> (Andrew Boothman's message of "Mon, 22 Dec 2003 01:19:31 %2B0000")
References:  <3FE500F4.3060108@potentialtech.com> <o9vfo9930c.fo9@mail.comcast.net> <3FE63E95.2020201@potentialtech.com> <3FE646A3.6080907@cream.org>

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Andrew Boothman <andrew@cream.org> writes:

> The only place I can remember hearing the term, "big wheel", before is
> in a Simpson's episode where Milhouse describes his dad as a, "big
> wheel down at the cracker factory", or something like that!

I wonder if that shouldn't have been "big wheel down at the cheese
factory".

But that's exactly how the term is most often used -- referring to
a high-level executive.

I very much doubt if the term started with, or was even popularized
by, the Big Wheel tricycle which came out in the mid '60s, but I don't
know for sure.  It'd sure be nice to have an OED or other etymological
reference book.



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