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Word: gauntness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...barrios. In the noon heat, the men of Bamban-young men in immaculate sport shirts and pressed linens, old men in soiled shorts and wide straw hats, nearly all of them with poverty in their faces-listen with silent intentness. After the speeches there are questions. Gonzales Guilas, a gaunt, tall man who is the lieutenant of his barrio, suggests a nightly password-else how will they be able to tell patrolling soldiers from "New Faces?" The major dodges this...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PHILIPPINES: Our Friends Outside | 7/3/1950 | See Source »

...Gaunt and nervous, Houdek holed up in his unpretentious suburban home at Great Neck, N.Y., just across the street from a police station, and contemplated the necessity of working for a living. Cocking his ear toward Prague, he said dolefully: "They will . . . declare me a traitor, but I do not regard this as a personal thing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FOREIGN RELATIONS: The Neck, Not the Heart | 5/29/1950 | See Source »

...Paris this week, the U.S. Secretary of State stopped for a two-day parley with French leaders. His next stop would be London. There Acheson would first confer with Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin, gaunt-faced (21 Ibs. below his usual 231) after an operation and three weeks in a hospital. Then France's Foreign Minister Robert Schuman would join them for three-way discussions. Later, Acheson would meet with representatives of the nine other North Atlantic signatories...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CONFERENCES: With Utmost Vigor | 5/15/1950 | See Source »

...Hilltop House. Three months ago on the island of Guernsey, fellow bank clerks began to notice that gaunt, hound-eared Tom Hugo was becoming more & more abstracted about the water pipe supplying his house on a hilltop in St. Peter Port. The water pipe, which Tom considered his own, was already feeding two houses, and Tom had learned that soon the waterworks were planning to add another two houses on the line. If that were done, thought Tom, there would be scarcely a trickle left for himself and his family of eight. He plunged deep into Guernsey law, studying what...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Stopped Proper | 5/8/1950 | See Source »

Britain's dingy, cotton-weaving city of Lancaster (pop. 50,250) has lost most of the glamour and importance that clung to its name in the days of John of Gaunt and the Wars of the Roses. But it cherishes today one spectacular bloom in the person of its dashing Tory M.P., Brigadier Fitzroy Maclean, 39, whose recently published bestseller, Eastern Approaches, has made its author one of the most popular political figures in the United Kingdom...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Ambassador-Leader | 5/1/1950 | See Source »

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