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Word: toits (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...EVENING CONCERT--Milhaud-Le Boeuf sur le Toit; Marais-Suite in d for Viola; Janacek-Sinfonietto; Mendelssohn-Quartet No. 4; Haydn-Symphony...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WHRB Programs for the Week | 9/26/1960 | See Source »

...Toit, Terre, Travail. The D.P.s came to them from as far away as Siberia-a Czech who once taught Latin, an elderly seamstress, a family who lived 14 years in refugee camps. But for Pire. they were never "beggars living off our crumbs." They got "toit, terre, travail" (roof, land, work): "We help them, but only halfway, the other half coming from them." He thought it essential for women to find pride in keeping a clean house with curtains at the windows, and men in earning their own wages, before the "weight of the odor and the noise...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BELGIUM: Open on the World | 11/24/1958 | See Source »

...built like a halfback. His creamy tenor occasionally softens to a bedroom whisper, but usually it is roguish and rolling. As he sings, he twists and crumples a battered felt hat. That was how he began ten years ago in Paris' Bohemian cabaret Le Boeuf sur le Toit (The Ox on the Roof). Soon he was earning more on the radio and in the music halls than Chevalier. During the war he sang for French prisoners in Germany. He looks well-fed; as he explains it, "there is always a crust of bread for a good-looking...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: French Sinatra | 5/6/1946 | See Source »

...Jean Cocteau (Enfants Terribles, Le Boeuf sur le Toit), who early in World War II considered it the duty of a writer "to make himself . . . into the form of a zero and to pass that ring over the finger of France," was still pretty much a zero...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Men's Fate | 1/13/1941 | See Source »

This dramatic cataclysm was prosaically described last week in an effort to show that it was true. Its describer was Dr. Alexander Du Toit of Johannesburg who, defending the widely held ''displacement hypothesis," brought into court recent studies of fossils, glacial records and sedi mentary rocks of southern lands now separated by water. So much alike are these records at corresponding stages, urged Dr. Du Toit, that they must have been deposited in one undivided land. But the geological record of the southern hemisphere as a whole is utterly different from that of the northern-which would show...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Penrose's Party | 8/7/1933 | See Source »

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