Word: dis
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Boston's Herald Traveler ignored the revelations of the rival Globe. Detroit News Editor Martin Hayden, beaten by the Knight's competing Free Press, complained that the Pentagon study was "only offered to the so-called antiwar papers." And the Houston Post did not even mention the dis closures until Attorney General John Mitchell moved against the Times, four days after the story broke. The initial reaction of Post Executive Editor Bill Hobby was: "Aw, that's no story...
...WAAH-O!" Arms flailing, fingers popping, fanny shaking, honey-blonde Geraldine sashays onstage in her spanking new outfit. Her boy friend, Killer, objects to the cost of it all, and an outraged Geraldine screams at him: "The DEBBIL made me buy dis dress! I didn't want to buy it, but ole Debbil, he MADE me. You don't like it? Well, what you SEE is what you GET. OOO-WAAH-O!" The sly black face next appears supported by a clerical collar. Now it is the Rev. Leroy of the Church of What's Happening...
...searching for? We want to fight." Instead of seeing Viet Cong, his men had to deal mainly with prostitutes seeking business, and swarms of kids selling Cokes and offering to do the G.I.s' laundry. Calley tells of making shy love to a young madam and then trying to dis cuss political philosophy with her: "Susie had never heard of Communism or democracy." If he explained the difference, Calley thought, and she said that she preferred Communism, "What am I to do? Kill her? Capture her? Because if she is a Communist, that's what my duty...
...last few years, his controversies have been well-chosen and he has almost always come out on the right side. Consequently, he has the same standing among younger interns in his hospital that Brewster has at Yale. His run-in with Nixon over being appointed and then dis-appointed as assistant secretary for health and scientific affairs only bolstered his reputation with liberals in the medical profession...
...customers in Los Angeles, the San Fernando Valley and other areas of Southern California. It is the company that residents love to hate. Public phones are often out of order, private phone bells ring for no reason, strange buzzes come through receivers, conversations are abruptly dis connected, and the slightest delay in paying the bill brings harsh dunning...