Word: gossips
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...affairs of youth. She had other thoughts on her mind last week in Manhattan, however, where she looked on fondly as Actor George Hamilton, 27, played a few location scenes for a film called Jack of Diamonds. As George flew off to Europe for more filming, Hollywood Gossip Sheilah Graham figured the current romantic odds: "I have $10 that says yes. She quite obviously adores him. At the other end of the bet is his pressagent, who is wagering $100 that the marriage will not come...
...damage suit against the makers of the drug triparanol on the ground that it had rendered her husband impotent. The court ruled that in Tennessee an irate wife is entitled to her day in court only if she has suffered a personal attack, such as slanderous gossip, or an attack upon her marriage, as in alienation of affection. The difference between the rights of a husband and the rights of a wife, explained the judges, "is a matter of legal classification, not discrimination...
...between Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lucy Mercer continued to be the talk of Washington. Since Jonathan Daniels revealed the 30-year romance of the President and his wife's onetime social secretary in The Time Between the Wars, additional details, waves of remembrances and a good deal of gossip have kept the story alive...
Mint Green. "Brownie," as he had been called since childhood, had plenty of vim and vigor and decided to give the place a shaking-up. He also clasped to his bosom an ex-pressagent named Hy Gardner. Gardner got a gossip column and a big voice in the upper echelons. Soon Brownie brought in a dismally square Tangle Towns puzzle contest, a mint-green third section, a weekly pocket TV magazine (editor: Gardner), and an early-bird edition that came out at 8 p.m. The puzzles boosted circulation, but the green section did nothing, the TV guide lost money...
...death, the manuscript was written in a secret cipher that bright little Beatrix devised herself. The cipher took six years to crack, but Potterites fearful of unsettling revelations in the Journal can relax. What it contains is an always dutiful, occasionally delightful collection of anecdote, travelogue, history and plain gossip. What it shows, in text and illustration, is how Beatrix, bored and desperate in a self-imposed isolation, beat at the bars of her confinement with nothing more than a quill pen and a palette of paints...