Word: flick
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1940
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Tuberculous Voltaire lived wizened and fire-eyed for 84 years. "In individuals in whom the tubercle bacillus grows meagerly . . ." observed Dr. Lawrence F. Flick, "[it] may make life more pleasant and make the individual more profitable to society than he otherwise would be." The passionate life-lust of John Keats's odes and sonnets is ironically accounted for in his autopsy: "The lungs were entirely gone; the doctors could not understand how he had lived the last two months." Professors often shake sad heads over their belief that had Keats (who died at 25) lived an average lifetime...
...Boston James P. Lannon, II Betsy Nilson, St. Catherine's William H. Latimer, Jr. Deedee Dunham Endicott Junior College Allan L. Levine Sue Rogers, Brookline Dean B. Lewis Jeanne H. Grange, Beaver Burton R. Lewkowitz Dura Toures, Penn Hall Mark Linenthal, Jr. Shirley Mitchell, Radcliffe Robert M. Lockwood Ann Flick, Philadelphia Caleb Loring, Jr. Betty Weaver, Andover Alfred Lurie Garry Penne William G. Lyle, Jr. Helen Farnsworth, Winchester Richard F. Manegold Sheiler Frazzler, Pine Manor Charles C. Marshall, Jr. Mary Huffs, Miss Wheeler's David Martin Gertrude-Adeie Benjamin, Watertown Philip E. M. Mayor Pamela Haworth, Boston Donald E. McNichol...
...rocker, but he's really only a genius. He dreams about steam engines at night. So these two get together and the "Dog Star" sails across the Atlantic. Steam all the way, mind you. That's about all there is to this "Rulers of the Sea" flick, and it's not enough. Sometimes the thing moves so slowly that you wish a good gust of wind would some around and help those engines along. Not that it isn't a hell of a lot more interesting than a History I exam. If you like good photographic shots of ships plowing...