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Word: stomach (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...astroturf green now as you enter the stage of "Spectator Degeneracy." The blank expression on the face, intermittant pulse beats, and visible post-nasal drip characterize your stuporous countenance. Penn State may beat Pittsburgh, and Notre Dame may wallop USC, but there's no bigger upset now than your stomach, as two-day old stuffing settles like a universal gym in the ol' labonza...

Author: By Bill Scheft, | Title: Thanksgridding Guide | 11/19/1976 | See Source »

Monday, November 29: Your metabolism is now running post patterns. You feel disoriented in class and experience stomach spasms when you eat square meals. Ironically, Kaopectate is the only thing that keeps you running. Monday Night Football. Cosell's face. You retch. This game passes...

Author: By Bill Scheft, | Title: Thanksgridding Guide | 11/19/1976 | See Source »

Miss Kite's unnatural obsession with the clinical mechanics of sex [Oct. 25] leaves me with nothing more than a grimy feeling and a slightly squeamish stomach...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Forum, Nov. 15, 1976 | 11/15/1976 | See Source »

Died. Mrs. George Herman ("Babe") Ruth, 76, widow of the Sultan of Swat, baseball's greatest player; of cancer; in Manhattan. A Broadway dancer from Georgia, Claire Hodgson was unimpressed when she first met Ruth in 1923. "His face and his stomach were fat, his legs like a chorus girl's," she wrote in her 1959 memoir The Babe and I. As his second wife, she helped curb the Bambino's bacchanalian excesses during their 19-year marriage. After his death, she became the custodian of his legend. Though the Babe's home-run records...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Nov. 8, 1976 | 11/8/1976 | See Source »

...unbalance the play. On the one hand, Candida becomes a less than credible savior; on the other, Morell is elevated to almost tragic dimensions, while Marchbanks seems no more significant than his own self-characterization as "a little nervous disease." The hardest part of the production to stomach is Marchbanks' final epiphany; at the end, Epstein's Morell is convincingly desolated, but Emerson's poet appears no less...

Author: By Julia M. Klein, | Title: The Meek's Inheritance | 10/28/1976 | See Source »

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