Word: grinned
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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With druggist's jacket With Lisa-like grin With frame sans picture With next of kin With sketch replete with verbal vision Why didn't you print...
...singing their Moscow hosts' praises, the delegation took off for Peking. Franklin burbled of the "never-to-be-forgotten" sight of the Kremlin by moonlight, described Molotov as "carefree of spirit ... He left an impression upon me of being perfectly sincere," while Malenkov "cannot resist that friendly grin when someone has made a crack at the Russians or one of their particular policies." Wrote Morgan Phillips: "I am convinced-unless I know nothing of international affairs and human be havior-that the personal friendliness shown to us in the Soviet Union has been altogether genuine . . ..There are grounds...
Batter Up. Nothing happened for a moment until Montgomery belatedly flagged Ike with a white handkerchief, and the President broke into a broad grin. The heart of Ike's speech was his program. The program, he said, had been contained in 64 proposed bills. Said Ike: "Now 54 of them were enacted into law. We didn't always make home runs but we did have 54 hits . . . Now that, after all, is a batting average of .830. And any baseball fan will tell you, that's pretty good going in any league." He recalled some...
...take up a . . . glass, it is ure to drop from my hands and break?" "There is no mystery in the matter," answered he cheerfully: "You are attentive to the baby and not to the glass.") How could she learn to stop biting her nails, not to "grin in an idiotic kind of way," to endure deafening small talk ("Those who live near railway stations," replied his Rev, "soon cease to hear the puffs and screams ... of engines...
...last week Springfield's Illinois State Fair drew the biggest crowd (225,000) in its history. The main attraction: the broad grin of Dwight Eisenhower, entirely surrounded by Republican politicians...