Word: coverer
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...studying the tattoo, "but you'd see the outline." "I couldn't stand even that," said Mrs. Lambert. "Let's put a dripping dagger through the head, then," suggested Charlie. "I could do that for nine shillings." It was no go. "Well," said Charlie, "I could cover it with a nice nude and a Latin inscription." "No more women," said Mrs. Lambert. At last Charlie had an idea. "Why not a snake? That would cover it." Cecil Lambert, who hadn't said a word, started from his lethargy. "Can't stand snakes," he cried. "Dream...
...monocled dandy who last week, for the 23rd year, superciliously trademarked the New Yorker's cover...
...whom Erich Ludendorff and Adolf Hitler plotted. In the U.S., John L. Lewis,* who had risen from statistician to president in the United Mine Workers, was getting ready for a trip to Europe. In New York, Franklin D. Roosevelt (shown as a pipe smoker on TIME'S 13th cover) had returned from convalescence to take up a fruitless job as head of the American Construction Council. In Moscow, Joseph Stalin was quietly getting his hammer lock on the Communist Party. In Ahmadabad, Gandhi, jailed, was finding words which were to become truth to scores of millions...
...from Ann Arbor, the youthful-looking Crimson head football coach thought his biggest problem would be "that of organization." "Ordinarily I'm not particularly interested in having Varsity players out for spring practice," he told a hastily called press conference, "but this year we have too much ground to cover...
Four inches of powder cover 37 to 46 inches of snow on Cannon Mountain at Franconia. The weather is fair, skiing good...