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

...main, they were tatterdemalion innocents with long hair, granny glasses, and a sense of bewildered outrage at the war and the nation's political processes. Not so innocently, many were equipped with motorcycle crash helmets, gas masks (purchasable at $4.98 in North Side army-navy surplus stores), bail money and anti-Mace unguents. A handful of hard-liners in the "violence bag" also carried golf balls studded with spikes, javelins made of snow-fence slats, aerosol cans full of caustic oven-cleaning fluids, ice picks, bricks, bottles, and clay tiles sharpened to points that would have satisfied...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: WHO WERE THE PROTESTERS? | 9/6/1968 | See Source »

...Moscow, TIME'S Bureau Chief Jerrold Schecter had an unexpected opportunity to test his new knowledge of Russian. Fresh from a four-year tour in Tokyo, Schecter was winding up a crash course in a language school in Monterey, Calif., when the news sent him hurrying to his latest assignment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: Aug. 30, 1968 | 8/30/1968 | See Source »

EMBARKING for the Balaklava of the Chicago stockyards, the foresighted Democratic delegate would ideally-and intelligently-go equipped with: goggles (to protect the eyes from tear gas and Mace), cyclist's crash helmet (from billy clubs, bricks, etc.), flak jacket (from snipers), Vaseline (from Mace), Mace (from rioters), washcloth (from tear gas), bug bomb (to kill the flies that infest the amphitheatre from nearby stockyard dunghills), folding bicycle (there is a cab strike), roller skates (carpet tacks scattered on the streets by the demonstrators may decommission the bike), wire cutters (in case delegate is trapped inside the amphitheatre...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: THE COMPLEAT DELEGATE | 8/30/1968 | See Source »

...Austrian Empire, France, Germany, Italy, Denmark and The Netherlands. To date, the 20th century's most fateful year was 1914, when the West plunged into what Winston Churchill called "another Thirty Years' War." That semipermanent conflict spanned such events as the Russian Revolution (1917), the Wall Street crash (1929), the rise of Nazism and the New Deal (1933). Indeed, 1968 should hardly unnerve those who recall 1939 and its sickening slide into World War II-or the incredible kaleidoscope of 1945, which alone produced the defeat of Germany, Italy and Japan, the first atomic bombs and the United...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: WHAT A YEAR! | 8/30/1968 | See Source »

Last week Foote, Cone came down with a crash. After a brusque meeting with the ad company's officers, TWA announced that it was shifting its account to the much publicized, two-year-old Manhattan agency of Wells, Rich, Greene. Admen were stunned. For one thing, Wells, Rich, Greene had not even participated in last summer's drag-out battle for the TWA billings. Moreover, only nine months ago, blonde, fortyish Mary Wells, the agency's president and cofounder, married Harding Lawrence, chairman of Braniff Airways, whose $6,500,000 account had taken her struggling outfit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Advertising: Up, Up and Away with Mary Wells | 8/23/1968 | See Source »

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