Word: eye
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...when the St. Louis Post-Dispatch's Raymond Brandt asked whether the President had read an article in the current Saturday Evening Post praising Charles Michelson's astuteness, the President cocked an interested eye at the Democratic pressagent seated nearby...
...city began his journalistic career with Scripps-Howard nine years ago on the Baltimore Post. By 1934 he was managing editor, and when the Post was sold to William Randolph Hearst, the Cleveland Press soon found room for Clayton Fritchey. Thirty-one, ruddy of face, blue of eye, Reporter Fritchey has recently used his spare time to improve his tennis, write a dramatization of Lion Feuchtwanger's novel The Oppermanns...
...magnitude to the eighth. Now 120,000,000 miles distant, it will come within 20,000,000 miles (less than one-quarter of the distance to the Sun) before receding. At its nearest approach late in July, it will have reached the sixth magnitude, will be the first naked-eye comet since...
...with an author's foreword and a fearsome introduction by Waldo Frank, it runs to only 184 pages. But readers who were not frightened by Waldo Frank's imitation thunder might have gathered that in Malraux's stormy tale they would feel more than met the eye. Like Malraux's other books, Days of Wrath is a fable; its story is topical but it carries implications as wide as the modern world...
...Shaw's speech at the Metropolitan Opera House, a Buchmanite mass meeting, Jane Addams and Chicago's Hull House, a drunken evening with the intelligentsia, a milk strike in upstate New York, Charles E. Mitchell ("a man with a full-fleshed common face and a fierce, unconvincing eye-a man of a low order, caught in suspicious circumstances and hard put to it to talk himself out") on trial for defrauding the Government, his grandfather's house in a country town. On his way to Russia he found that London now looked "much like Chicago...