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Word: balding (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Colorado's brainy Republican Senator Eugene Millikin sat, hands clasped limply, looking rather glum, and listened to testimony before the Joint Congressional Atomic Energy Committee in Washington. His bald pate was partly mantled by a neatly folded handkerchief, which Millikin did not bother to explain. But two days later, he landed in a hospital with a bad head cold...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Nov. 22, 1954 | 11/22/1954 | See Source »

...only one of the war criminals in Spandau who got along with all six of his companions. Albert Speer, No. 5, Hitler's production genius, said: "If we didn't have Von Neurath, we would all go crazy." They were an ill-assorted lot: fat, bald, obscene Walter Funk (No. 6); rich, young, suicidal Baldur von Schirach (No. 1); dangerous, unrepentant ex-Admiral Karl Doenitz (No. 2); weird, half-sane Rudolf Hess (No. 7): arthritic, pious ex-Admiral Erich Raeder (No. 4). Von Neurath would recall for them the glittering days when he was his country...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Number Three | 11/15/1954 | See Source »

...news toward a malodorous situation: the bad records of the Communists in the Chamber of Deputies. A onetime resistance hero named Edgardo Sogno began it with his Pace e Libertá campaign (TIME, Nov. 1). Last week Rome's influential II Tempo took up the history of bald and boisterous Vincenzo Moscatelli, a Communist Deputy and member of the party's Central Committee. In 1932 Comrade Moscatelli was caught by Mussolini's police and sentenced to 16 years in prison; that gave him a certain claim to fame as an anti-Fascist hero, and even entitled...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ITALY: I Have Done Much Wrong | 11/8/1954 | See Source »

There was nothing outwardly magnificent about Marc Andrew Mitscher, boy or man. A dull student in Oklahoma City schools, he was dropped from Annapolis as a disciplinary problem, got back in only to graduate at the "wooden end of the line." "Pete" Mitscher was already bald and beginning to look wizened when, at 29, he won his wings. Thereafter, throughout the monotonous, between-war years of fitness reports and training procedures, he lived only for naval aviation. As the first U.S. Navy officer assigned to command flying operations from the deck of a ship (the converted collier Langley), Pete Mitscher...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Turn on the Lights | 11/1/1954 | See Source »

...trouble with the circulation in their legs and feet, Glasgow's Dr. John Kelvin prescribed a drug (Roniacol) that is supposed to open the arteries far from the heart. After they had taken four tablets a day for two months, the patients-who had both been bald-reported that they had grown fine heads of hair...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Cure for Skinheads? | 9/27/1954 | See Source »

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