Word: herring
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...working John Masefield, Poet Laureate of England, is famed for such narrative poems as The Everlasting Mercy and Reynard the Fox, has written 42 books of poetry, plays and fiction, has never achieved a first-rate novel. His latest attempt is neither satire, soufflé nor good red socialist herring, but a baffled British book...
...week by boat, train and plane sharp-eyed buyers piled into the city to attend the official autumn & winter openings of the great dress houses, openings that came so thick & fast that exhausted buyers had scarcely time for more than a foot bath, a glass of tea and a herring between engagements all week long. At the most popular house of all, Schiaparelli, on the Place Vendôme, department store executives who had crossed the U. S. and the Atlantic for no other purpose were glad to perch on a stair rail or the edge of a chromium table...
...Morgan fear any herring accusations. Returning from England on the Queen Mary, he told shipnews reporters...
...Richard F. Foss; Paul L. Franken; Joseph J. Geehern; Jerome L. Gilbert; Robert J. Glaser; Edwin St. J. Greble, 3d.; Frederick W. Griffin; Charles D. Griffith; David G. Halstead; Emrys C. Harris; Robert W. Harvey; Raymond F. Healey; Thomas V. Healey; Richard H. Hemp; Samuel S. Herman; Allen K. Herring; Garfield H. Horn; Robert G. Hoye; Arthur Isenberg; William E. Kendall; John F. Kennedy...
...green Isle of Wight lie the most famed yachting waters in the world. Here in a carefully marked out area of 24 sq. mi. were assembled 277 ships ranging from the world's greatest warship, the 42,000-ton battle cruiser Hood, to a proud delegation of British herring trawlers. Wardroom statisticians quickly figured that the 143 British warships in line alone displaced 670,000 tons, cost British taxpayers...