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Word: cooks (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

Unfortunately, the first set seemed to indicate mostly that those chess players ought to make room more than twice a week. Pianist Brian Cooke, who leads the band, had put together a disappointingly limited program, made up almost exclusively of arrangements by Quincy Jones and Boston's own Herb Pomeroy: not that there's anything wrong with Jones and Pomeroy, but the "quiet cook" tempo they both favor quickly grows wearing, and the band's ensemble work on such tunes as Aluminum Baby and Quince was ragged and lugubrious (though the reeds were quite smooth). Moreover, the brass insisted...

Author: By Michael W. Schwartz, | Title: Gary Berger's Band and Liz Filo | 11/18/1962 | See Source »

Ohio's anti-Di Salle vote swept Robert E. Cook out of office and brought in a mother-son team. Cook was beaten by Republican Oliver Payne Bolton, 45, a wealthy Cleveland-area publisher whose mother, Frances Payne Bolton, 77, was re-elected to her twelfth full term. A shift toward the right in Utah dislodged M. Blaine Peterson, who plugged the welfare state and was replaced by Professor Laurence J. Burton, 35, who attacked big Government and big taxes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The House: New Faces | 11/16/1962 | See Source »

This almost impossibly difficult act ostensibly shows how bloodsucking forces work; a young student who has witnessed Hummel's stripping of people's illusory virtues watches the innocence of the girl he loves drained. The symbolic drainer is a frightening cook (Karolina Nystrom) who turns gravy into colored water and poisons the love-hyacinths of the young couple. But the couple is pretty anemic anyway; Maria Livanos turns delighted innocence into unappealing skittishness, and Frederick Kirchhoff pouts and jumps unreasonably about the stage, making an intelligent idealist learning the fundamentals of Strindbergism seem a mawkish yalie...

Author: By Robert W. Gordon, | Title: The Ghost Sonata | 11/16/1962 | See Source »

...imps. Physically and intellectually these scholar-clowns could stock an eclectic aviary. Alan Bennett, a blond horn-rimmed owl, lectures on medieval history at Oxford. Jonathan Miller, who looks like an elongated ostrich and seems to be acrobattling his way through an imaginary soccer game, is a neuropathologist. Peter Cook, an unblinkingly phlegmatic penguin in tweeds, is a writer and editor. And Dudley Moore, who nestles like a pouter pigeon at the piano, is a musicologist, equally adept at organ and harpsichord...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: High Imp Quotient | 11/9/1962 | See Source »

...thick-walled cream pot, and sprays compressed oxygen at supersonic speeds over the bubbling mix. With a roar that would drown out a brace of jet fighters, the oxygen burns off the sulphur, carbon and other impurities in the white mass. Because it takes barely half an hour to cook a batch of LD steel, v. eight hours in the conventional, open-hearth furnace, the oxygen process melts the costs of labor, power and fuel. Production costs are about $3 a ton lower than in an efficient open hearth, and to build an oxygen furnace costs only half as much...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Austria: Steel's Magic Wand | 11/2/1962 | See Source »

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