Word: toughly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
After 18 hours' suspension, Domei reopened. The Army promised that this time the censorship would be tough...
...West Los Angeles, invested in wartime furniture. Little rubs of the Mauldins' own domestic life sometimes show in his cartoons. Explains Bill: "It's just because we have been apart so long. Besides we never really lived a family life. It's new and kinda tough. But we'll work...
Last week two stubborn men came to the parting of the ways. Out as a Hearst editor went rough, tough Lou Ruppel, ex-captain of Marines (TIME, Jan. 15). He had tried to give Hearst's Chicago Herald American the same rowdy tone he had given the tabloid Chicago Times before the war. But the cold, tired old voice that came over the telephone from San Simeon was not pleased, and out blew...
...institution." Monte Carlo's Queen. In the severe Russian tradition, Danilova started training at eight, when her aunt put her in the Imperial Theater School in St. Petersburg. Through nine cold and hungry years Danilova struggled to make the corps of Moscow's famed Maryinsky Theater, the tough and thorough proving ground for Imperial School pupils. In her second year at Maryinsky, Alexandra danced the lead in Stravinsky's ballet The Firebird, and from then on she was on her way. In 1924, she left the U.S.S.R. and joined Impresario Diaghilev in Paris. Her first husband...
Adapting radar to peacetime jobs was a tough reconversion problem. Chief obstacle: cost. A good ground-based set costs $75,000. Even a portable, airborne set ($4,000) has little future as a household gadget. Radar's first peacetime jobs will probably be in ship navigation* and on the airways...