Word: dog
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...four-car collision, a gas leak at Radcliffe, and a hot-dog holdup punctuated the weekend in Cambridge...
...face to face with the young gangsters and can do nothing but walk slowly towards them and take two slugs in the gut. Old George dies. Then the chase is on. The C.I.D. (Criminal Investigation Division) starts a slow but methodical chase. the killer is finally cornered at a dog track and captured by none other than young Andy...
...replies were worth the wait. "Your timely portrayal of the American G.I. in Korea is unparalleled in its reality," wrote Sergeant John A. Cook of the 5th Cavalry Regiment. "Weand I believe I speak for most of usappreciate the tribute you have given us dog-faces...
...week's end, dog-tired but cheery, Ike walked down the landing ramp at the Northolt airport near London, cracked: "This is Northolt, isn't it? I used to drink coffee here." He slept late on Sunday, sat around his Claridge's Hotel suite most of the day, then went to an informal dinner at U.S. Ambassador Walter Gifford...
...Thomas Erskine May published a treatise on parliamentary procedure which has been revised at intervals ever since. It includes a list of insulting words and phrases which the Speaker has ruled unsuitable for use in House of Commons debate. Among the banned expressions: insulting dog, behaving like a jackass, cad, caddishness, scurrilous, vicious vulgar, dishonest, swine, corrupt, criminal, blether (as applied to a speech), Pecksniffian cant. Last week the fifteenth edition of "Erskine May" was published; it showed four new epithets barred since the war's end: not a damned one of you opposite, stool pigeons, cheat, bastard...