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Word: bathing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...clear. Few things can delight shoppers weary of long lines, costly transportation and surly salespeople as much as thumbing through a richly illustrated booklet amid the comforts of home. Carol Lefcourt, a financial planner who heads a company in Palo Alto, Calif., likes to soak in a warm bubble bath while catalogue shopping. She says that she has not stepped inside a department store in 15 years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mail-Borne Cornucopias | 12/7/1981 | See Source »

...Shape gets her when she's balling this orderly in a therapeutic bath. The guy's killed off-screen as the camera fixes on her naked body, loosely wrapped in a sheet, her firm, ripe breasts erect and eager. She thinks the clammy hands caressing her are her lover's--Poetic Justice!--but the Shape adjusts the bath water to scalding and repeatedly shoves her head in it, holding it out of the water long enough for us to see the flesh peeling off and the red and white blobby pulp beneath. Hot stuff! Then the Shape drills a cute...

Author: By David B. Edelstern, | Title: More Merriment | 11/25/1981 | See Source »

...sculpture consists of six questions cut into the table top: "Do you need a bath?", "Are you going home?", "Do you cry?", "Have you been introduced?". "What is your next move?". "Do you know the facts...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Expensive Sculpture | 10/24/1981 | See Source »

...destroyer program. That could be its biggest contract ever. Congoleum, the proud parent company, has now moved its headquarters from Milwaukee to nearby Portsmouth, N.H. Construction of its new building, though, is slightly over budge and three months behind schedule. Maybe Congoleum should have had the Bath Iron Works build it. -By John S. DeMott Reported by Barry Hillenbrand/Bath

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bath's Fighting Company | 10/12/1981 | See Source »

...last seen, Reinhart was scouring a disco called the Gastrointestinal System for his shady boss in an even darker, cryogenic body-freezing scheme. Now, as the slimmed-down chef on a local TV cooking show, his main concern is whether the sliced mushrooms will brown in their lemon-juice bath. At last he can afford to reflect: "The best defense against any moral outrage is patience; wait a moment and something will change: the outrage, he who committed it, or, most often, oneself." The new philosopher soon needs all the patience he can muster...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Quixote in the Kitchen | 10/12/1981 | See Source »

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