Search Details

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

...Planning, said last night he had "expected the number of shifts to be slightly less." But, he had anticipated "as part of the single room rent policy that there would be moving about at first. My own feeling is that it should slow down--but that's just a hunch...

Author: By Richard Cotton, | Title: Uniform Rents Produce Student Room Juggling | 3/12/1964 | See Source »

...event but in a discovery-a correspondent, a writer or an editor has an impression, based on his own experience, that an old tradition is no longer honored or that a new mannerism is in vogue. It is easy to confirm (or sometimes to knock down) his hunch by checking with our correspondents in all parts of the country, who often turn up significant sectional variations in U.S. behavior that add to the story. An editor's observation that more teen agers spend their summer vacations working than used to when he was in college provides some interesting statistics...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: Jun. 28, 1963 | 6/28/1963 | See Source »

...Bruce scandal. And in 1892, a Parisian named Hector Giroux was so anxious to get his hands on the Hawaiian Missionary auctioned last week that he went to Fellow Collector Gaston Leroux, who had the stamp, and murdered him. When detectives finally picked him up on a hunch, Giroux confessed and surrendered the stamp...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World Business: More Than Child's Play | 6/7/1963 | See Source »

Douglass was better treated than most. A mulatto, he had a hunch that his master was his father. At about the age of seven, he was loaned to his master's relatives in Baltimore, where his new mistress started to teach him to read until her husband grumbled that literacy would make the boy "unfit to be a slave." Douglass snitched books from the house and bribed little white boys to help him with the hard words. He scrawled letters on any available walls. Eventually he mastered the language and held classes to teach his fellow slaves. "Those...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Black Abolitionist | 5/24/1963 | See Source »

...salts. But nobody had identified a hormone with such precise effects. He could only guess that it was one of the many produced by the outer cortex or "bark" of the adrenal glands which are astride the kidneys. In the early 1950s, other investigators confirmed Conn's hunch by isolating an adrenal hormone now called aldosterone and recognized as one of the most powerful of all the body's chemicals...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Endocrinology: Blood-Pressure Hormone | 3/15/1963 | See Source »

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