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Word: pencilers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...sure, macular degeneration, which currently affects an estimated 10 million Americans, is not a fatal disorder. But it can be cruelly debilitating. For while the macula (named after the Latin word for spot) is no wider than a pencil, it is a hundred times more sensitive to small-scale features than the rest of the retina. Without a healthy macula, people cannot read a newspaper, recognize a friend, thread a needle, watch TV, safely negotiate stairs or see much of anything...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: IN SEARCH OF SIGHT | 10/1/1997 | See Source »

...next to me was taking notes on his lap-top when his pencil fell over the top and onto a girl's head," he said...

Author: By Lisa B. Keyfetz, CONTRIBUTING REPORTER | Title: Ec 10 Heads List of Largest Courses; 'First Nights' Second | 9/25/1997 | See Source »

...through the obscurity in which she first labored, through the acclaim that began in the 1960s, through the sometimes heated denunciation that ensued when she defended controversial church teachings on contraception. She was not some saintly relic but a willing servant of her God: "I am like a little pencil in [God's] hand. He does the thinking. He does the writing. The pencil has only to be allowed to be used...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SEEKER OF SOULS | 9/15/1997 | See Source »

...Jade Goober, Web Hubbell has just finished his lunch with an all-vegetable dish listed on the menu as Bubba's Delight. Trie, following standing instructions, has given him the check plus three carbon copies suitable for submission. At the next table, a waitress impatiently taps a pencil on her pad as James McDougal changes his mind again and again...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GO, HOGS! CHOP SOOOOIE! | 8/11/1997 | See Source »

...other film from Hollywood's so-called Golden Age (with the possible exception of "Ben-Hur"), David Lean's epic deserves to be seen on the big screen. The sweeping expanses of sand and sky, desert cliffs, even the startlingly blue ribbon of the Mediterranean Sea; the small, pencil-thin figure of a lone rider, shimmering in the distance like a mirage; the long convoys of Bedouin warriors, dwarfed by the sea of sand--all of these, seen in 70-mm and magnificently accompanied in stereo by Maurice Jarre's glittering music, are worlds away from the reduced-version, letterbox...

Author: By Lynn Y. Lee, | Title: Coolidge Corner Offers Boston Large Screen Entertainment | 7/18/1997 | See Source »

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