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Word: garretful (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Scene is a a small garret occupied by young man, product of hard working parents and a Public High School. His name is Leo and he is a work. In the room with Leo are his three roommates--Upton, Francis, and William. The latter three are "Andover men." The radio is playing...

Author: By F. W. Byron jr., | Title: The Walls of Jericho | 1/7/1958 | See Source »

...British Museum, gossip and newspapers in half a dozen languages, a mass of information on going topics such as had never reached an American newspaper before." Marx wrote on political developments in England, France, Spain, the Middle and Far East, "the whole world, as seen from his Soho garret." Editor Greeley, notes Author Hale, "was a perennial twister of the British lion's tail," and had an eager accomplice, in Anglophobe Marx. Some of Marx's bitterest tirades for the Tribune, e.g., his dispatch on the plight of British workers during the depressed 18503, were bodily incorporated into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Marx's Meal Ticket | 4/15/1957 | See Source »

...rugby squad yesterday elected Terrence S. Turner '57, of Adams House and Garret Park, Md., as captain for the fall season. Alastair J. C. E. Rellie '58, of Eliot House and Bronxville, N.Y., was elected vice-captain...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Turner Will Lead Varsity Ruggers | 10/23/1956 | See Source »

...their individualism. They take pride in it; as a tourist attraction and source material for novels, they consider themselves one of France's national assets. Outsiders have long accepted their eccentricities and ascribed them simply to bohemianism. A young man or woman who lived in a fifth-floor garret, dressed like a Basque fisherman and sported an outrageous hairdo, was expected to be glamorously undernourished and suspected of harboring tuberculosis. But otherwise their elders were more worried about their morals than their health. Now, it seems, the diagnosis must be changed: far too many of the students of Paris...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: La Maladie de Boheme | 7/9/1956 | See Source »

...points. Bob is pictured as a ne'er-do-well cartoonist and psychopathic coward who has turned to an analyst for help because Bromo Seltzer has failed him. Reduced to painting nudes on ties and landscapes on the backs of turtles, Hope is visited in his garret by a dazzling blonde (Eva Marie Saint) who used to be his wife and is now engaged to George Sanders, a moneyed comic-strip artist whose ego contains more hot air than a Turkish bath...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures, Jun. 25, 1956 | 6/25/1956 | See Source »

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