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Word: crazed (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Connecticut's Ernest Fiene; with a bit left over, Halseth started a fund to buy Grandma Moses' $400 oil, Staunton, Virginia, The kids put on dances, stage shows, wastepaper campaigns, badgered their parents for contributions. People as far away as Manhattan heard about Rock Springs' art craze, wrote advice on what to buy, sometimes even donated paintings. Once, Halseth read that Thomas J. Watson, board chairman of International Business Machines, had commissioned some paintings. "I got out my Who's Who and looked up Watson's address and asked him for one," says Halseth. Businessman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Collecting in Wyoming | 11/24/1952 | See Source »

...shot from the 1880s, three bustled and beskirted ladies skip rope, flashing a daring inch of petticoat. In another decade, bicycling was the craze, as Author Jensen illustrates, though the Boston Women's Rescue League warned that 30% of all fallen women had at some time been bicycle riders. After a "long night in armor," a 1910 gym picture shows a bevy of union-suited beauties straining at pushups, pulleys and punching bags. In another 1910 photograph, Julia Ward Howe, at the age of 91, is being wheeled to a suffrage drive to recite her Battle Hymn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Came the Revolution | 11/24/1952 | See Source »

Columbia's Contemporary Civilization course, conceived in 1919, is parent of the modern American craze for "General Education." The "Great Books" and "integrated study" courses have their roots in this 33-year old experiment...

Author: By Ronald P. Kriss, | Title: Columbia Suffers in Hustling Gotham Setting; Pushes Towards Cosmopolitan Student Body | 10/4/1952 | See Source »

...leading makers of microscopes.* Its founder, Ernst Leitz, a German who had worked with a Swiss watchmaker before settling in Wetzlar, introduced the watch industry's mass-production technique to microscopy. When the Leica was added as a sideline, the tail began wagging the dog. As a worldwide craze for miniature cameras and candid photography grew, so did Leitz. By World War II, the company had 3,000 employees and was grossing $10 million a year. Then it concentrated on war work, and was so vital to the Nazi war industry that U.S. heavy bombers tried thrice to knock...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Leica's Invasion | 6/16/1952 | See Source »

Members of the older generation greeted the new craze-the first really daffy outbreak by U.S. college students since the days before World War II-with unconcealed irascibility. "It's going too far," said 34-year-old Teacher Gordon Southworth of Riverdale Country School in New York. "This pantie snatching is a case of sensualism . . ." Considering the source, it was a crushing rebuke, for on March 31, 1939, when an undergraduate himself, Gordon Southworth had made his contribution to the craze of the year by swallowing 67 live goldfish at one sitting-and had eaten a peanut butter sandwich...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MANNERS & MORALS: Epidemic | 6/2/1952 | See Source »

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