Word: shoeing
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...tourists with dollars, a drink costs as little as 25? and a five-course dinner only 80?. American cigarettes come to 11? a package, Argentine steak 25? a lb., a taxi ride across town 10?, a shoe shine 1½?. Outside the capital, tourists can live in a first-class hotel for $1.50 a day, with meals...
Inside Job. In Oakland, Calif., Allen Nauman hid his $45 roll in his shoe, went to a movie, dozed off, awoke with the shoe still on, the roll gone...
Badger tackling was precise and vicious. "Hit 'em at the shoe-strings" seemed the Midwesterners' motto and time after time Eli ball-carriers would find their feet blasted from under them and land with a jarring thud...
Commuter Campuses. This fall, practically every college in the U.S., crammed with ex-G.I.s, feels like the old woman who lived in a shoe. But California, whose shoe is the biggest, feels the pinch as badly as any. Last week at Berkeley, the narrow off-campus streets reaching out from the 300-foot Campanile were choked with cars from all over the Bay region...
Jackie Robinson had already learned, by a lifetime's practice, the lesson another Robinson-soft-shoe dancing Bojangles* -once laid down while acting as the unofficial Mayor of Harlem. Bojangles' formula: "Do the best you can with what you've got . . . and get along with the white folks." Jackie had no desire to be a martyr for his race; he was just a young fellow anxious to make a living as a ballplayer. Though he barely knew Joe Louis, he sought him out for advice. He got an earful which boiled down to three words...