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Word: hiding (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...Otherwise, you give too much of yourself away, and what's left is just your surface. One door leads to another, and you have to decide where you're going to close the doors. Open too many and there's nothing left behind where you can hide, where you can live...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hollywood: Unlikely Myth | 3/29/1963 | See Source »

...doctors' reference books, all must be used locally. Flagyl (chemical name: metronidazole), synthesized by France's Rhône-Poulenc laboratories, is the first effective trichomonacide taken by mouth; it gets into the bloodstream and can track down the parasites in internal glands where some of them hide. For this reason, it is also the first useful drug for men, who often pick up the parasites from their wives and may suffer urethritis or prostatitis...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Drugs: For a Female Complaint | 3/29/1963 | See Source »

After a long inquiry through the European under-world, van Stratten discovers the criminal background of Arkadin's wealth. He finds, in addition, the real purpose of his mission. The financier, in a mad attempt to hide his past from Raina, wants to eliminate members of his former gang. Soon the investigator becomes the only person left in the way of Arkadin's ambition. Here Welles loses the chance for a dramatically effective ending by killing off Arkadin in a unrealistic...

Author: By Charles S. Whitman, | Title: Mr. Arkadin | 3/27/1963 | See Source »

...obscure his brogue which is obscure, but my goodness, man, that's no way to tell a joke. Kenneth Tigar shouts his jokes too, but that's because he realizes they are all basically the same joke (he is asked to call everything "Darlin'") and politely tries to hide the fact. (Teuber, incidentally, has been made up to look like a cross between Pinocchio's father, Charley Weaver of the Jack Paar show, and Angelo Winemaker of the TV commercials...

Author: By Anthony Hiss, | Title: Juno and the Paycock | 3/22/1963 | See Source »

Love for Trees. Khrushchev described with horror a recent jazz concert he attended ("One would have liked to hide, but there was no place to hide"), expressed deep distaste at such new dance crazes as the twist ("Simply obscenities, some sort of frenzy, the devil knows what"), and turned on the painters and sculptors with undisguised fury. Some, he roared, seek inspiration in "rubbish heaps and stinking latrines," or "present people in an intentionally ugly aspect." Such a man was Ernest Neizvestny, a sculptor who has recently won wide acclaim in Moscow's art world with his provocative works...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: Of Firs, Flies & Fears | 3/22/1963 | See Source »

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