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Word: bermudas (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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After the show's four-week run at the Hasty Pudding Club, the 70-member company will tour New York and Bermuda...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Pudding Hopes 'Belles' Sells | 10/3/1983 | See Source »

...Crimson Squash Coach Dave Fish led a victorious national junior team in the Bermuda Invitational Tournament in mid-July. Incoming freshman Kevin Jernigan, brother of Kenton '86. last year's top-ranked collegiate player, played for the squad...

Author: By Jim Silver, | Title: Out of Their League | 9/12/1983 | See Source »

Dressed in battered Panama hat, short-sleeved shirt, Bermuda shorts and ancient tennis shoes, he seems most in his element while pottering around the seashore inspecting biological specimens. His evenings are generally spent at home with his wife watching soap operas and sumo wrestling on TV. In conversation, he rarely ventures anything more voluble than "Ah so desu ka [Is that so]?" Such are the salient features of the still, shy life of Emperor Hirohito, born as the 124th Imperial Son of Heaven in an unbroken line stretching back 2,643 years. Schooled since birth in the remoteness and reticence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Japan: An Enigmatic Still Life | 8/1/1983 | See Source »

...traveling." Ten times as many Germans as Americans visit Italy each year; as many vacationers on the Continent come from tight little Britain as from the entire U.S. By contrast with the early days of jet travel, when tourists from the heartland came dressed in Hawaiian shirts and Bermuda shorts or polyester pants, and asked stridently for their bills in "real money," most Americans today are well attuned to European sensibilities. A customer-service official at a Stockholm Nordiska Kompaniet department store says mildly: "We no longer see so many 85-year-old teen-agers with rhinestones on their eyeglasses...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Americans Everywhere | 7/25/1983 | See Source »

Europe on $20 a Day by Arthur Frommer; Frommer/Pasmantier; $9.95. It started out as $5 a day, but times and the inflation rate have changed. Frommer, however, has not. Still the popular Baedeker of Bermuda-shorts wearers everywhere, Europe on $20 approaches the Continent as a kind of Disneyland for post-adolescents, and brims with a wide-eyed sense of wonder. But after one too many meals in department-store cafeterias, one too many Dickensian bed-and-breakfasts and one too many afternoons of hauling dirty laundry around Zurich in a vain search for the cheap laundromats that Frommer assures...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: Why Not the Best? | 7/25/1983 | See Source »

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