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Word: loree (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...cheap) at the Thomas More book shop in Holyoke Center which features religious works But if your tastes are more wanton you'll be happier in the basement of 99 Mt Auburn where the Million Year Picnic stacks show off superheroes not the supernatural comic books and the their lore...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Looking for Mr. Goodbook | 6/26/1983 | See Source »

...Dempsey's lore of names there is also a town: Shelby, Mont. (1923 pop. 2,000). The way Johnstown had a flood, Shelby had a prizefight. Hankering to be a world capital for a day, Shelby constructed a 40,000-seat arena for a Dempsey-Tommy Gibbons fight, only to have trouble raising the $300,000 guarantee required by Dempsey's rascally manager Jack ("Doc") Kearns. ("Give Doc 1,000 Ibs. of steel wool," it was said, "and he'll knit you a stove.") Barely 7,000 people paid to see the fight: the rest crashed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Memories of a Heavyweight | 6/13/1983 | See Source »

Stalking the French is nothing very new. Nineteenth-century geographers gave the sport its lore, and "nombrilism"--the notion that France was the navel of the world--tried to bring to the French people the order, place and nationality that history and circumstance had not. These days, though, such certainty is far off. In distinguishing the French fact from the myth, historians not only fear generalizations--the mark of any good culture-watcher--but fail to draw any conclusions whatsoever...

Author: By Nicolas J. Mcconnell, | Title: . . .An Alien Tribe | 4/16/1983 | See Source »

...lore of tax collecting, there is nothing more enduring than the image of the wily French farmer hiding his earnings in his mattress or the Italian maintaining a separate set of books to deceive the state treasury. The stereotype is at best only partly true. As a percentage of gross domestic product, European taxes are substantially greater than those...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dodging Taxes in the Old World | 3/28/1983 | See Source »

...Broadway lore has numerous burbly stories of brave understudies suddenly being called in to take over, at which point a famous agent or director notices them and sends them on to stardom. This inspiring scenario put the first spotlight on Shirley MacLaine, who won a Hollywood contract after subbing for Carol Haney in Pajama Game. But even the understudies find it difficult to believe that such things actually happen. "Those who think that being an understudy will lead to opportunities are wrong," says British Actor Daniel Gerroll, who covers for Edward Herrmann in Plenty. When a star leaves a play...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: No More Waiting in the Wings | 3/14/1983 | See Source »

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