Word: cheeked
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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However, let them come. Mississippi has endured worse! And if, perchance, the Rev. Smith be among them, Mississippi will, I venture to say, turn the other cheek by extending to him a brand of hospitality to which, by virtue of the evangelical qualities of his letter, he is not entitled...
...philosophy that a man should work his way through college," the CRIMSON used the statement which appeared in a metropolitan paper, taking these words as those of the President in his speech before the New England division of the Associated Harvard Clubs. In endeavoring to make the usual cheek on such statements, the CRIMSON get in louch with a University Hall official, who refused to deny the quotation. It was with this in mind that the editorial was written, Mr. Conant's policy, as indicated in his annual report, on questions of this nature, is well understood...
...high cheek-bones and rasping voice that brought Miss Hepburn notice in her early productions seem to have faded a bit into the background. It is a good thing. A bit of extra weight looks well on her and the softer voice will increase the range of her eligible roles...
...hour later, tongue in cheek, he was fibbing to a comely girl with a pert purple hat. "I'm a delegate from Andorra," he said. She looked at him blankly. "It's in the Pyrenees," he explained...
...Reggie McNamara, "Iron Man" of the sport, the Six-Day Bicycle Race in Manhattan last week was his tooth. A friendly, mild-mannered man with a deep scar in his right cheek, McNamara is the son of a New South Wales sheep-rancher. He and his 13 brothers and sisters all learned to ride on the same bicycle. Reggie alone took the sport seriously. He shot kangaroos, sold their skins for money to enter local races, arrived in the U. S. in 1913. By 1920 he was the greatest rider in the world, with records, most of them still unbroken...