Word: lockings
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...constitutional? The court's long-awaited answer may come in the case of Eddie J. Hicks, a wandering guitarist who was convicted in Washington, D.C., of being a vagrant "leading an immoral or profligate life." That phrase is so unconstitutionally vague, argues Hicks, that it permits police to lock up anyone who looks suspicious. The court is likely to pay close heed...
Opening Rusty Locks. "The music and the body movements seem to channel their energy," says third-grade teacher Rochelle Sheby. Adds P.S. 77's assistant principal, Mrs. Mildred Stiller: "These kids are not afraid of learning to read, because they don't know they're doing it." The technique also breaks down inhibitions. "It's like a rusty lock," explains Levine. "Put a key into it, and it won't work. Keep trying, and it will loosen up and begin to function." He is convinced that music is a key to learning to read. Since...
...watchmen check sign-out books, lock windows and doors, and watch for prowlers. The University Police would not enter the dormitories...
...Dally, by William Hanley. More Neanderthal men have crossed the American stage than ever lived in prehistoric caves. These slopeheads invariably gnaw their English, scratch their armpits, and lock jaws and claws with some naggingly neurotic female. A play dismally devoted to such characters opened the Broadway theater season amid the blanketing hush of the New York newspaper strike. Even without the so-called "death watch" of waiting for the daily drama critics' reviews, there was little proof that Mrs. Dally had ever been dramatically alive...
According to Sgt. McCarthy a casehardened link chain which meets the "45C Rockwell Hardness Test" and an equally strong lock are the only things to use. State law requires that bicycles be registered, as well, which can be done for 25 cents at the fire station or police headquarters...