Word: soaps
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...said we would have to be going, but Mr. Whiteside urged us to look in on filming and spotting before we left. "It's a lovely operation. Each glass gets a thin coating of dilute soap solution before final drying--just enough to give it a cloudy appearance. The spotters use the same mixture on trays; that's a job where people with artistic inclinations can indulge in creative expression." We thanked Mr. Whiteside for his offer but said we really did have to leave. For a while we had fears of getting lost in the tunnels...
...Rogers-Dale Evans Show (ABC), mercifully described as a variety hour, has run out of everything but saddle soap and sentimentality. It will disappear this month...
...Robbins, a sometime Hollywood screenwriter whose long novel The Carpetbaggers ran into the millions of sales. Robbins writes with a spade, and of course he heaped Carpetbaggers with sex; a choice passage follows a call girl as she shaves a particularly hairy client with a straight razor and jasmine soap, dumps him into a jumbo bathtub, pours champagne over him as if he were a quart of fresh strawberries, then jumps in to help him splash...
...Soap is one of the marks of civilization, but it is still a pretty primitive agent for cleansing the human skin. So says a British dermatologist, who claims that most soaps today get people clean by removing from their skins the very things that nature put there to guard against irritation and infection. Writing in the New Scientist, Dr. F. Ray Bettley accuses soaps made the traditional way, from caustic alkalies and fats, of not only removing grease and dirt but of penetrating the skin's protective layers and leaching out the skin's natural protective emulsion, frequently...
...Bettley admits that the average person's casual washing is not likely to cause him trouble, but feels that housewives, cleaning women, dishwashers and others constantly exposed to soap are especially vulnerable to soap-caused skin trouble. He thinks that the scientists daily performing molecular magic should get busy devising something better than soap. To be generally accepted by the public, it would have to be both inexpensive and solid, like a soap bar-requirements that the special liquid cleansers now on the market fail to meet. Dr. Bettley challenges modern chemical science to produce such a cleanser...