Word: belle
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...shadow of South Mountain in the eastern section of Seoul, between dusty, windswept Bell Street and the foul creek known as Clean Stream, lies the East Gate Market. Here, in prewar days, was the busiest, most bustling collection of shops in the city. Here a man could buy the rice and vegetables for his family, a housewife could buy a silk jacket...
...Handful of Beads. Today the East Gate Market is coming to life again. Most shopkeepers have no shops, only boxes and crates or an old army cot on which to display their wares. Some lay their little collections on the ground, brushing away the dust which sifts off Bell Street. They have not much to sell: a handful of amber beads, half a dozen mismated, tinted water tumblers, a tall, slender, gaily painted chalk doll. Some have rice, flour, corn, and cotton cloth. They get the food in devious ways. One said that he had his rice from a Department...
Dunster, which had previously lost to Leverett in Thursday's first round, swept the first four matches to clinch its victory. Mal Bell, Quincy Williams, Pete Randall, and John Zentay got the four quick wins, while Jim Allen added the insurance victory for the Funsters...
...body will also concern itself with top secret research in all the sciences, including atomic, the White House announcement disclosed. Oliver E. Buckley, chairman of the board of the Bell Telephone laboratories has been asked to serve as chairman of the group. Conant and Buckley are members of the general advisory committee of the Atomic Energy Commission...
...Leverett-Dunster matches Bunny Lew Brown defeated Paul Trinchieri, 6-1, 6-3; Funster Mal Bell defeated Neil Shulman, 6-3, 7-5; Dunster's Pete Randall defeated Sam McClerd, 6-4, 6-2; Jim McCormick of Leverett defeated Hugh Raphael, 6-2, 6-3; Dwight Bartlett of the Hutch defeated Stan Gill, 6-4, 2-6, 6-4; and Bunny Ed Wilford defeated Don Keller...