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Word: kid (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

Around a corner in The Bronx scuttled a wild-eyed runt. The kid's tiny round head was ducked between high, skinny shoulders, his nose was bleeding, and he sobbed as he ran. After him pounded three bigger boys. One by one they gave up the chase; the runt ran too fast. He ran until he was out of sight. He is running still...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: The Busy Heart | 6/2/1947 | See Source »

Billy the Kid. That is life in the "upholstered trap" fashioned for himself by William Samuel Rosenberg, born in 1899 on a kitchen table on Manhattan's Lower East Side. His father was a peddler who would rather have been a poet. "When people were doing passementerie," says Billy, "he was in fringe." On the fringe is where the Rosenbergs lived. They never held on to a set of rooms for long; it was cheaper to move (to The Bronx or to Brooklyn) than pay the rent...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: The Busy Heart | 6/2/1947 | See Source »

Eleanor (with the help of four servants) keeps Billy's homes as antiseptically clean as a swimming pool. He calls her "the Sapolio Kid" and "one of the two greatest gals of the century" (the other: Fanny Brice). Eleanor doesn't think much of Billy's paintings, but he takes them as seriously as he has taken all his other equalizers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: The Busy Heart | 6/2/1947 | See Source »

...Hansen, a short-order man in Shorty's lunch counter after school and on weekends, is just the kind of kid the major leagues go after: big, cool and hardworking, with a good pair of hands. The scouts, baseball's ivory hunters, have seen plenty of high-school wonders flop in the big time-but Bobby Feller was only 17 when scouts found him in Van Meter, Iowa, and they always hope to find another. Among Bob Hansen's technical skills: a blinding fastball with which he mixes a tantalizing change of pace, a wide-breaking curve...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: June Hunt | 6/2/1947 | See Source »

Kittery Point was shocked that Eliza Wall, a well-bred, teen-age schoolgirl, should run after a one-eyed French Canadian kid named Claw Moreau, whose family was on town relief. At first, in school, she had been repulsed by his rude speech, the sinister black patch over his missing eye, the squalor of the wharfside shack where his husbandless mother carelessly raised her children, the fixed lines of bitterness which came from learning early that he was a social outcast. Later Eliza's fear became curiosity; and as she grew older, sympathy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Doom of Differences | 6/2/1947 | See Source »

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