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

...SHAMELESS OLD LADY. An old woman, having spent long years in servitude as daughter, wife and mother, wins a new lease on life when her husband dies. She outrages her family by becoming the liveliest widow in Marseille. Played to perfection by the veteran star of the Paris stage, Sylvie (like many other French performers, she uses only one name...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Listings: Oct. 28, 1966 | 10/28/1966 | See Source »

...subject of this unsatisfactory exercise is a young woman's frigidity, her failure as a wife and mother, her dabbling with Lesbianism, and her psycho-analysis. The dialogue is uproariously banal. Husband to wife re son: "Don't you realize that a lack of affection will cause him neurosis?" Wife to shrink: "Why, in my dreams, won't my mother let me sit beside her?" Shrink: "Are you sure you can't answer that?" Wife: "Perhaps because she kept me at a distance--even as a child...

Author: By Jeremy W. Heist, | Title: La Fuga | 10/24/1966 | See Source »

...have given him wings.' And it's our pilot." Or trading stamps. It seems a girl friend saved 1,345 books of stamps toward an African safari. When she licked the last one, she got sick and died of glue poisoning. Or sex. "My husband is English, you see. He's terribly conservative. He wears pajamas with a vest. I give him a hug and a kiss and he says, 'Not here, not here.' Yesterday I started to give him a hug and a kiss and he said, 'Not here, not here...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Comedians: Hot Potato | 10/21/1966 | See Source »

...people in show business who spend their evenings working, brunch is virtually a way of life. Explains Actress Lee Remick, the blind wife in Broadway's Wait Until Dark: "It's about the only way my husband and I can entertain." So popular has brunch become that it is now being re-exported to Britain (where the word was coined at the turn of the century) as the latest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Customs: The Sunday Brunch | 10/21/1966 | See Source »

They may not all know what they are doing, but their frenetic activity is paying off handsomely for the Post. By financing an uninhibited hiring spree, Kay Graham, 49, has pumped new life into the paper she took over from her husband Philip after his suicide...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: Expansionist Spree in Washington | 10/21/1966 | See Source »

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