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Word: 1950s (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...that TV didn't have to be that way. The show was spawned in the earnest mid-'60s, before popular culture swallowed up the middlebrow and "educational TV" became a comical oxymoron. During last week's taping, Buckley told his guests about David Susskind, the talk pioneer from the 1950s who was host of a show called Open End. "Every night he'd go on the air with some guests at 9," Buckley said, "and he'd keep going--an hour, two hours, three--until he got bored...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: All Quiet on the Firing Line: William F. Buckley Jr. | 12/27/1999 | See Source »

...Disney has been doing animatronics since the 1950s, so what I'm doing isn't new at all, but its taking a long time," Trembaly says...

Author: By James P. Mcfadden, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Area Inventors Create Millennial Symphony which Genuinely Welcomes the Y2K Bug | 12/15/1999 | See Source »

Hooper re-creates the early days of polio-vaccine research and weaves this narrative into the story of HIV's origins, which is pretty solid until it hits Africa. HIV can be traced back to bustling villages along the Congo River in the 1950s. From there, however, the story line frays into dozens of related but possibly unconnected threads. Hooper picks up several of these, including, tantalizingly, the fact that the earliest recorded AIDS cases coincide almost perfectly with a map of the polio-vaccine testing sites. But there is no evidence that cells from African chimps were used...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Did Polio Researchers Create AIDS? | 12/13/1999 | See Source »

...1950s--the last time, we nostalgically think, when the American middle-class narrative was coherent, predictable: everyone in his place and a preordained place for everyone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Baltimore Aureole | 11/29/1999 | See Source »

Liberty Heights is the fourth in Barry Levinson's "trilogy" about his hometown of Baltimore, Md. After Diner (1982), Tin Men (1987) and Avalon (1990), he felt he had finished with tales about growing up in the city's Jewish neighborhood in the 1950s. But then an ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY review of his 1998 movie, Sphere, referred to Dustin Hoffman as a "noodgey and menschlike" Jewish psychologist. The racial stereotyping annoyed Levinson ("Nobody would say Mel Gibson was playing a Catholic industrialist in Ransom"), but it also got him thinking about his youth again. Rather than fume, he sat down...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The Creator | 11/29/1999 | See Source »

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