Word: skin
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Angeles, Governor Earl Warren drew the honor of opening the 47th Annual American Bowling Congress. While the flashbulbs popped, the Governor opened Congress with a bang-and held center-stage by the skin of his teeth while Comedian Harold Lloyd flashed...
...Operatic Soprano Helen Traubel Miss Symphonic Matinee of 1947 and gave her an autographed baseball. Veteran Muralist Dean Cornwell reported after a coast-to-coast tour that in good looks "suburban girls lead city girls," and have "better developed breasts, more streamlined figures ... a lasting, healthy bloom to their skin. . . ." Sweden's 88-year-old King Gustaf moved down to the French Riviera for the sun & fun. Arid in Britain's House of Lords, Christopher Maude Chavasse, one-legged Lord Bishop of Rochester, plugged for a ban on liquor in workers' restaurants on the ground that young...
...answers to some unexplored questions: What makes healthy people healthy? Why has the prevalence of intestinal ulcers, once rare, risen so enormously in the 20th Century? Why did the stillbirth rate in Wales, and tuberculosis in Britain, drop sharply during the war? Why do workingmen die of stomach and skin cancer twice as often as professional men? Why do doctors have twelve times as high a death rate from angina pectoris as farm workers...
...formula: 1) mention the product name at least seven times every 15 seconds during the commercial; 2) repeat the plug as often as possible; 3) do not change the plug for at least 26 weeks, preferably 52; 4) phrase the sales talk to get under a listener's skin -in short, give it a distinct nuisance value...
...intelligence and charm of the Burmese people. By the time he sat down to write The Chequer Board, his sympathy for colored peoples had become an explicit insistence on social equality. Says his white hero, slowly dying of his war wounds: "I had been thinking about these darker-skinned people that I got to know about. . . . You know, there don't seem to be nothing different at all between all of us, only the color of our skin...