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Word: bombs (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...false bomb scare at the beginning of the meeting forced about ten students and 35 members of the national press from the building while the Cambridge Fire Department investigated the report...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 100 Call for Strike End | 4/14/1969 | See Source »

...Kuomintang forces by fighting its way more than 6,000 miles to the safety of the Yenan redoubts. During World War II, Lin fought against the Japanese invaders in China, later helped defeat Nationalist troops in the civil war. Supposedly, he was wounded in Korea, perhaps by a U.S. bomb. If so, the injury may help explain his poor health and frequent absences from political life for medical treatment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: Mao's Heir | 4/11/1969 | See Source »

Though Vietnamese pilots could learn to fly any plane, the U.S. for now is equipping the V.N.A.F. with less sophisticated models. The A-37 is designed for counterinsurgency fighting: it maneuvers neatly with a sizable bomb load and can linger longer over targets than bigger fighter-bombers. It can reach a target more rapidly than the old A1. "This is the aircraft we need," says Captain Pham Van Pham of the 524th...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The War: An Improvement in the Air | 4/11/1969 | See Source »

...ever written against war: "American planes, full of holes and wounded men and corpses, took off backwards from an airfield in England. Over France, a few German fighter planes flew at them backwards, sucked bullets and shell fragments from some of the planes and crewmen. . . .The bombers opened their bomb-bay doors, exerted a miraculous magnetism which shrunk the fires, gathered them into cylindrical steel containers, and lifted the containers into the bellies of the planes. The Germans below had miraculous devices of their own, which were long steel tubes. They used them to suck more fragments from the crewmen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Price of Survival | 4/11/1969 | See Source »

...doomsday, which, as he gently observes, "could easily be next Wednesday." His first book, Player Piano (1952). told how a crew of smoothly programmed engineers take over America. Another, Cat's Cradle, began with a reporter trying to fix the whereabouts of important Americans at the time the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima and ended with the end of the world. A third, Mother Night, explored the guilt of a patriotic spy and propaganda agent, "a man," as Vonnegut summed him up, "who served evil too openly and good too secretly, the crime of his times...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Price of Survival | 4/11/1969 | See Source »

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