Search Details

Word: angel (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...Rookie of the Year in 1958 with the Senators, he was the first California Angel to hit over 300. He still holds the club record for bases on balls and fewest strikeouts...

Author: By M. TOTAL Recall dake, | Title: A Baseball Quiz for Reading Period Blues | 5/25/1971 | See Source »

...kept blindfolded, and participants can wear stocking masks & disguise their voices. Grabbing our angel would involve 2 or 3 mos. discreet work. I would imagine that he would have devices in his car to call for police assistance at the slightest danger. The thing to do is find out where he goes for weekends, or where he shacks up-if he shacks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: How to Grab the Brain Child | 5/10/1971 | See Source »

History was made. Calumet Farm's two entries, Bold and Able and Eastern Fleet, set the early pace. Jim French, moving out from the middle of the pack, was bumped so hard, Jockey Angel Cordero Jr. said later, "that I nearly fell off." Far behind him, Canonero II moved from 18th position and streaked for the outside. At the final turn, Jockey Gustavo Avila cut around the fading front runners and booted Canonero II down the stretch to win going away by 3¾ lengths. Jim French finished second, two lengths ahead of Bold Reason. The Kentucky-bred colt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: A Gunner Makes History | 5/10/1971 | See Source »

...incoherent hostility and depression. Before they do, Skezag records a long conversation between Film Makers Joel Freedman and Philip Messina and a smooth-talking hustler named Wayne, who claims that he is not really addicted. Two friends of his eventually enter the claustrophobic scene: Sonny, quiet and morose, and Angel, who talks a political line. Casually and inevitably they all take heroin. Returning to the ghetto, they realize anew they have gone nowhere; the heroin, like the streets, is its own dead end. The film closes on that despairing note and on Wayne's abrupt realization that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: In the Streets | 5/10/1971 | See Source »

YVONNE DE CARLO. She played Lola Montez, Calamity Jane, Salome and Moses' wife. She was the Flame of the Islands, the Buccaneer's Girl, the River Lady, the Scarlet Angel and the Captain's Paradise. Best cleavage forward, Yvonne De Carlo (real name: Peggy Middleton, of Vancouver, B.C.) steamed her way through Hollywood, sometimes seriously but often as conscious self-parody. The wife of Hollywood Stunt Man Bob Morgan and mother of two boys, De Carlo, 48, is an exemplar of the John Wayne philosophy: go west and turn right. "The whole company kids me," she says. "They call...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: The Once and Future Follies | 5/3/1971 | See Source »

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