Word: nez
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...servants who were like members of the family. Since you can't go back to Paris in the '20s or Havana in the '40s or even Brooklyn in the '50s, we bring it to you, with all the quality jodhpurs, dusters, spats, boaters, corsets, spurs, poodle skirts, pince-nez and butcher's smocks you've come to expect from us--but at a fraction of the price you might pay at an ordinary costume shop...
...duty. They knew it was hard for me, for the first time to be opposite the Idaho Indian tribes." Many Native Americans have hard feelings over that; only three of the state's six tribes have endorsed his candidacy so far. Says Barrett Moffett, a member of the Nez Perce Tribal Executive Committee: "There's certainly a split within our tribe whether to vote for him or not. How he will treat the tribes of Idaho is difficult to predict...
...organs and the keys and th'BOOTsy. Some DYE-no-MITE three-piece (PEACE my brother, my mother, my man, my son myfunkyfreshfreak) checkered suits vest and all. Tell me Sly, bout somebody you just love to burn: you see it's in the blood. Acid laced and pinch-nez wah wahs, and then bye-bye to Tricky Dick and hello political, no Chuck D, but in yo' face, undermining society like none of Harvy-M's HOMOsexuals have done in years...and this is before the Village People. That's right, my funky crossdressin' freaky styly friends, my maggot...
Dana E. Franzen of Somerville attended the event to disseminate information about his group, Cambridge Love-In Franzen, who sported a pince-nez, nearly waist-length hair and a top hat, said that the people who attended Earth Day yesterday were "receptive in comparison with the way they usually are, which...
...gull flies, the distance is not great: 21 miles from Cape Gris- Nez in France to the famous white chalk cliffs of Dover on the English side. Yet down the centuries the narrow neck of water separating Britain and France has served as one of Europe's most enduring physical and psychological barriers. Only twice have armies crossed it to invade Britain: the Roman legions in 54 B.C. and the one led by William, Duke of Normandy, in 1066. Secure on their sceptered isle, Britons developed their own proud brand of insularity, summed up as "splendid isolation" during the palmy...