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Word: gaylord (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...story is fundamentally serious. The daughter of the owner of the Show Heat falls in love with a river gambler the dashing Gaylord Reveual playing opposite him in one of the Show Boat's melodramas, the role she would like in real life. Their marriage the alternate prosperity and poverty of a gambler's life, the disillusionment and the separation follow quickly. Still in love they meet on the old "Show Boat" many years after, as it lies against an old Mississippi wharf in the moonlight...

Author: By H. B., | Title: THE CRIMSON PLAYGOER | 10/25/1932 | See Source »

Separated. George Gaylord Simpson, of the American Museum of Natural History's field staff, onetime Yale professor; and Mrs. Lydia P. Simpson. Her charge: He carried on correspondences with young women in Steamboat Springs, Colo., and Amarillo, Tex., he had met on fossil hunts. Countercharge: She made scenes in the Museum of Natural History...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, May 9, 1932 | 5/9/1932 | See Source »

...Harvard game which his dropkick won for Yale (TIME, Nov. 30). The cold changed to bronchitis, the bronchitis to ''pleurisy with effusions." All pleurisies are grave matters. They very often indicate a latent or incipient tuberculosis. Footballer Booth at the end of last week was taken to Gaylord Farm Sanatorium, a tuberculosis rest cure operated at Wallingford, Conn, by Dr. David Russell Lyman, lung specialist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Varsatility | 12/14/1931 | See Source »

...Neill's life is not his dismissal from Princeton in 1907 for hijinks, not the period in which he bummed about on ships, not even his long association with the Provincetown Players. It begins on Christmas Eve, 1912, when drink and irregular habits sent him into the Gaylord Farm (Wallingford, Conn.) sanitarium, a tuberculous patient. His biographers note that he went in a boy and came out a man. At least, that was where he started writing seriously. Up to that time his sorely-tried father, Actor James O'Neill, thought his son was just "crazy." Eugene...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theatre: Greece in New England | 11/2/1931 | See Source »

...golf course, tennis courts, handball courts, and in the gymnasium of his expansive house. When he is making a climbing comedy his only protection is a platform with mattresses on it, built out from the side of the building a few yards below him. During one shot his brother Gaylord Lloyd, who was watching him, became sick. Harold Lloyd says his next picture will deal with college life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures Nov. 10, 1930 | 11/10/1930 | See Source »

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