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Word: baldly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...unlike the 10:03, is low-key at first. Hundreds of theatregoers stream on to the sidewalks of Boylston Street, bleary-eyed and speechless. Soon they stop yawning long enough to engage each other in conversation. A bald, middle-aged man with spaghetti sauce stains on his wrinkled white shirt turns to his wife and says, "We spent $7.50 to see this thing, so we're going back inside, and we're going to stay until someone rapes the redhead...

Author: By Frank Rich, | Title: The Wind in the Sassafras Trees at the Colonial through Saturday | 9/23/1968 | See Source »

Given this compulsive speeded tempo the Who relish in a wide variety of styles ("They have a nice sense of play' 'a photographer friend remarked) ranging from the chain gang 'Bald Headed Woman' to the baroque Swingles Singers Bach effect on 'Silas Stingy' chanting 'money money money money. . .' in rising and falling strains to harpsichord music...

Author: By Sal I. Imam, | Title: The Who | 8/13/1968 | See Source »

...What they want is more response from Bill Fulbright-perhaps some of the down-home concern that now impels the scholarly Senator to pop into his car alone and disappear for days at a time into the just-folks country, squeezing hands and lifting his hat to compare bald spots. The primary will be only the first hurdle. The winner will still have to face Republican Charles Bernard, 40, a racial moderate and a fiscal conservative who is considered the strongest G.O.P. senatorial candidate in recent years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Arkansas: Just Plain Bill | 7/26/1968 | See Source »

...into a talkathon. They frantically compete with each other for big-name, talkers. Joey Bishop interviews Ronald Reagan, Carson brings on Ayn Rand, Merv Griffin chats with Bertrand Russell. One night, Dick Cavett has Norman Mailer as his guest, the next night he leads a spirited discussion between James Bald win and Yale Philosopher Paul Weiss...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Programming: Talkathon of Comment | 7/26/1968 | See Source »

...Will Everyone Here Kindly Step to the Rear and Let a Winner Lead the Way" wafted down to the back of the hall. A small, bald-headed, ruddy-faced man who said he was a farmer from northern Middlesex County manned a desk full of nomination petitions at the doorway. One reporter, somewhat uncharitably, said the farmer was "dressed in a smartly-cut Robert Hall suit." Sitting next to the farmer was a cripple, who had a slick DA hair-cut and a black leather jacket. His crutches lay on the floor. "We've got to get Governor Wallace...

Author: By D.c. Fitzgerald, | Title: 'next president' | 7/1/1968 | See Source »

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