Word: grinningly
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...seen that story in The New Yorker?" queried one of his friends with an evil grin...
...Correspondent McCulloch began to pour his 30,000-word file into Manhattan, Cover Subject Norman Chandler (a handy man with words himself) asked with a grin: "If you give your editors everything you've got, how many issues of the magazine is it going to take to carry it all?" For the story that carries the sense of it all, see NATIONAL AFFAIRS, The New World...
...London for the Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference. He had an audience with the Queen, and dinner at Windsor Castle; he spent a weekend at Chequers, and got a request from Madame Tussaud's that he sit for a wax statue. Prime Minister Diefenbaker flashed a happy grin, confided to a friend: "I'm enjoying...
...hour (10:30 p.m., E.D.T.) audience just why millions have been getting up at 7 a.m. five days a week to catch his slick Texas slang and catgut twang. Since April Dean has charmed early risers away from Dave Garroway's Today with his easy ways, his oleaginous grin, and a no-ulcer format thickly populated with bosomy fiddlers. Although his corn is off an aged cob ("Haven't had so much fun since the old cow had twins"), Dean is, in the words of an associate, "photogenic, amiable, happy-go-lucky and a nipple feeder-that...
...pint of cream, two eggs, vanilla and sugar, drives his 1957 white Oldsmobile convertible to the Washington studio, where he runs through the songs for his show. To Dean, country music is a happy thing, and keeps him practicing the advice he gave when he signed off last week: "Grin once in a while; it's good...