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Word: tobacco (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

Like any small boy, the beagles reacted to the initial cigarettes with tears and redness of the eyes, coughing and, sometimes, nausea. After a few weeks, many of them seemed to have developed a taste for tobacco. They wagged their tails and jumped willingly into the box where they were hooked up. Then, on the 24th day of the experiment, the first dog died. The second died 205 days later, and three more died before the experiment was ended after 14 months. The remaining five were sacrificed for autopsies. Ten nonsmoking control dogs, two of them with tracheostomies, were also...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Research: Dogs, Death & Smoking | 7/15/1966 | See Source »

...company owes much of its unique character-as well as its profits-to Kresge's farm-bred frugality and his stern Methodist morality. He once donated $500,000 to the Anti-Saloon League, said that "I never gave a dime to any church the pastor of which uses tobacco." Kresge men and women, mindful of old S. S. dictums, still eat separately in company cafeterias, habitually snap off lights when leaving washrooms-although managers complain that switches are wearing out. Yet when President Cunningham in 1961 urged that the chain fight discounters by opening its own discount "K-Marts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Retailing: Kresge's Ten Billion Dimes | 7/1/1966 | See Source »

...election, there was not just one issue; Duncan had other things going for him. A vibrant, crew-cut lawyer, he has put himself over as a colorful, forceful fellow during his two terms in Congress. A former seaman, he still enjoys a pinch of chewing tobacco, proudly wears Duncan tartan ties. He often reminds himself of appointments by jotting notations on the palm of his hand ("If I write myself notes, I lose them"), keeps on scrawling right up his arm when his schedule gets really busy. Morgan, a wealthy cattle rancher and construction executive who was a Kennedy appointee...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Politics: At Issue: Viet Nam | 6/3/1966 | See Source »

...naturalist engraver. Only 129 sets are known to exist. The price nearly doubled the last sale of Audubon's Ele phant, which went in 1959 for $36,400. ¶At London's Christie's auction house, a 241-piece dinner service of 18th century tobacco-leaf Chinese porcelain sold for $97,000. Made under Ch'ien Lung, a ruler of the Manchu dynasty, the service is patterned in rose-colored tobacco leaves, a style designed to appeal to the then-new Western trade. Only 20 years ago, according to Christie's, such a service would...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Market: Highs | 6/3/1966 | See Source »

...talent found outside the Montand family, I was particularly impressed by Michel Piccoli, whose portrait of the unhappy clerk is a small masterpiece. Perspiring as freely as he fantasizes, nervously smoothing his sparse, slicked-down hair, and curling his lips into a tobacco-stained smile, Piccoli is simultaneously poignant, and repulsive. Charles Denner, Jean-Louis Trintignant, and Claude Mann never fail to be compelling as a cynically belligerent smark aleck, Miss Signoret's languidly egotistical lover, and a charming but distant policeman, respectively...

Author: By Martin S. Levine, | Title: The Sleeping Car Murder | 5/25/1966 | See Source »

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