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Word: weekday (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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This season, a healthy Ilsa began a furious training regimen, got up at 5 a.m. every weekday, bicycled two miles from her home in Bankstown to a pool to swim up to 3½ miles. After school she swam another two miles. So much time in the pool's chlorinated water gave her blond hair a mermaidish green tint...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: The Konrads Kids | 1/20/1958 | See Source »

After 41 years on Wall Street, wealthy Win Smith (his partner's-cut of the profits in 1956 was more than $150,000) is still a calm, friendly, unpretentious man. Each weekday he travels from his Manhattan apartment on East 72nd Street to his Wall Street office in a four-man car pool. He stays at his desk seven to ten hours a day, takes work home two or three nights a week. He relaxes on weekends at his 118-acre Connecticut farm near Litchfield by driving a tractor or romping with his seven-year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WALL STREET: S. for B. | 1/13/1958 | See Source »

...Person (Fri. 10:30 p.m.. E.S.T.), now in its fifth year, flickers weekly into more than 8,300,000 homes, and his ten-year-old radio broadcast, its audience shrunken by TV competition, still enables Murrow to get more than 1,000,000 Americans by the ears every weekday evening at 7:45, E.S.T...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: This Is Murrow | 9/30/1957 | See Source »

...Bigart (who went to the Times). The revamping job turned the paper into a vamp, neither Times nor tabloid-nor Trib. By then the smallest of Manhattan's seven major dailies, the Herald Tribune earned the additional distinction of being the only morning paper that had a substantial weekday circulation drop: from a 1955 peak of 387,276 to 367,248 this year. And despite such costly come-ons as a handy pocket-size TV supplement (editor: Hy Gardner) and a staff-produced feature magazine, Sunday circulation slipped from 596,308 in early...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: New Tonic for the Trib | 9/23/1957 | See Source »

...seemed to have the hilly course all figured out. But in the final round, it was the course that was his roughest opponent. A week of wearing golf on the hills of the Country Club turned out to be too much for a man who does most of his weekday walking around a dentist's chair. Slowly, Bud faltered. His drives shortened; his irons were lazy and weak. Said he sadly: "I got so tired, I was playing with a 'So what?' swing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Low-Pressure Champ | 9/23/1957 | See Source »

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