Word: boulevards
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Brassert, Walter Leon of Bloomfield, Ind.; Western Reserve Academy, Hudson, Ohio. Bredt, James Havens of 2364 Atkins Avenue, Lakewood; Lakewood High. Brumm, Gordon Lee of 2208 Emily Drive, Lakewood; Lakewood High. Cadenhead, Ian William of 39 Shelton Boulevard, Willoughby; Union High, Willoughby. Genuth, Saul Maurice of 3533 Hildana Road, Cleveland; Shaker Heights High, Shaker Heights. Kjellgren, Bengt Hugo of 2423 Eaton Road, Cleveland; Western Reserve Academy, Hudson. Layzer, Robert Bertrand of 2851 Euclid Heights Boulevard, Cleveland Heights; Cleveland Heights High. Reinhardt, Nicholas of RR No. 1, Raglund Road, Newtown; Terrace Park High, Terrace Park. Senger, Harry Lech...
Stewart climbed into his car and drove aimlessly until he chanced upon the First Congregational Church on Franklin Boulevard. Its slogan beckoned like a beacon: "Only a Stranger Once." Stewart went in, sat through the service and wrote a folksy column for the Press about the church, its frock-coated, friendly pastor and its "mighty fine" mixed choir...
...more pleasant things about Morgan is that he is unlike other radio comedians who seem to aim their programs at the category Life forgot--the no-brows. He eschews the Wilshire Boulevard school of humor, where in an ether buffoon sends a studio audience into unrestrained hysterics at the mere mention of a name such as "Wilshire Boulevard" of "La Brea tarpits." Nor does he open closet doors to the accompanyment of a eacophony of sound effects. If he is going to insult somebody he doesn't call him "baldy...
...nose tip from a Hollywood embrace. To Communist eyes this appeared "as bright and shiny as a toilet soap advertisement." In cutting the bulky novel by approximately two-thirds, gritted the Literary Gazette, the "American barbarians" had reduced Tolstoy's classic to a "him-and-her" boulevard romance, made Vronsky "an indisputable frequenter of dancing halls, and . . . [Anna] . . . probably a typist from Hearst's secretariat...
Gloria Swanson, 50, high-styled, onetime queen of the silent screen, had not yet faded from the Hollywood scene; she was back to act in a picture called Sunset Boulevard, her first movie in eight years. Her new role: a fading queen of the silent screen...