Word: mirror
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...looking in a mirror suspended above his head, a donor can watch the small apparatus that is the object of all this research. Only about six-cubic feet in size, this transparent-walled blood fractionator will be the pilot model for future production...
...Okla., Mrs. Emma Conway complained to police that her husband, after a spat, had: 1) mixed alcohol with her cosmetics, 2) smeared sulfa cream on her clothing, 3) cut the straps off her shoes, 4) dumped a hot roast with gravy all over the kitchen, 5) broken the bedroom mirror and two flower vases, 6) slashed her brassieres to shreds...
...week's end, Winchell had not let out a peep. Only note taken of the series was in Hearst's New York Mirror, his home base. Across Page One it ran the headline: THERE IS ONLY ONE WALTER WINCHELL. In this strange quiet, Publisher Schiff* raised her own voice, in her weekend Post column...
...front of the white limestone building at No. 1901 Constitution Avenue, in Washington, stands a semicylindrical mirror. Guards sitting at ease inside the door can stare at its coldly gleaming curve and watch the whole face of the building without leaving cover. Along the building's window ledges run beams of infra-red light, each hitched to an alarm system. The windows themselves are intricately wired, and hidden wires thread through walls and partitions. No visitor is admitted to this stronghold except for a very good reason, and once a visitor is inside, he is watched and escorted continuously...
...split with Lyons was mild compared to his old feud with Daily News Columnist Ed ("Little Old New York") Sullivan. Sullivan was sports editor of the old New York Graphic when the tabloid began Winchell's "Broadway Hearsay" column. After Winchell moved on to Hearst's Mirror at a fancy salary, Sullivan inherited his column spot. The feud officially began when Winchell accused Sullivan of columnar "blackmail" for inviting Heiress Barbara Hutton to throw a party for poor children in New York (she sent...