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Word: odors (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Washington sees more cause for hope. Veteran Sovietologist (and newly confirmed U.S. Ambassador to Moscow) Llewellyn Thompson told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last week that Moscow now feels much freer to act than it did just a few months ago. Red China, he reasoned, is in such bad odor with the rest of the Communist world that the Russians no longer cringe whenever Peking accuses them of "collusion" with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign Relations: Up the Back Stairs | 10/21/1966 | See Source »

...possible to use nonlethal gases to neutralize intruders and chemicals that would color a fleeing vehicle or leave a burglar with a distinctive, unshakable odor...

Author: By Richard Blumenthal, | Title: Professor Vorenberg Directs Presidential Fight Against Crime | 10/6/1966 | See Source »

...National Symposium of Science and Criminal Justice, speakers told of ideas for making automobiles theft proof, computer linked alarms that would pinpoint unseen law violations, non-lethal gases to neutralize intruders and chemicals that would color a fleeing vehicle or leave a burglar with a distinctive, unshakable odor...

Author: By Richard Blumenthal, | Title: Professor Vorenberg Directs Presidential Fight Against Crime | 10/6/1966 | See Source »

Bing Sting. The ease with which Bing pulls off this kind of frosty switch-about has left some people with a case of the shivers. One detractor described him as having "the look of a man constantly inhaling bad odors which only he can detect." When a tenor called in sick one day, Bing smelled the odor of laziness. Immediately he dispatched an ambulance and two doctors to the tenor's door. "He sang that night," recalls Bing with a wry smile, "and very well too." Some who have felt the Bing sting claim that he has a lofty...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Opera: Lord of the Manor | 9/23/1966 | See Source »

...arrested by reading William Burroughs: "Bet money on that." The now-notorious Mailer sense of smell, which got such a bloodhound workout in his last novel, An American Dream, now concentrates on the bowel: man's nature, he says, can be divined in "the color, the shape, the odor and the movement" of his stool...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Feeling the Truth | 9/2/1966 | See Source »

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