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Word: disarrayed (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...barren hearts, and it was a lost child who would kick up such rubbish to gain entrance into rooms so empty." Written with a sympathetic intelligence, at times fiercely lyrical, Buried Alive is an honest book about Joplin the idol and Joplin the victim in the frantic, manic disarray of rock in the '60s. A meticulous researcher, Friedman has taken great pains to document the Joplin chronicle as exhaustively as one might document the biography of a statesman-with the result that the large cast of minor characters may be recognizable only to groupies. Still, this is the best...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Alone with the Blues | 8/27/1973 | See Source »

...young hero, an enlightened Welsh aristocrat named Augustine Penry-Herbert, seemed to exemplify the misguided good will of his generation in England; he believed that 1917 had ended, not begun, the pattern of world wars. The Bavarian relatives whom Augustine visited for a while reflected the social and psychological disarray of Germany in the early 1920s. The concluding set piece of Hitler's abortive 1923 beer-hall putsch in Munich suggested the tidal pull of events in which all the characters were destined to be caught...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Turning Tide | 8/27/1973 | See Source »

Much of this drift can be laid to the relative disarray in the White House, which was formerly run with the highhanded authoritarianism of a Prussian drill field by the President's two top aides, H.R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Economy: A Creeping Paralysis | 6/18/1973 | See Source »

...civility, using his style as a hard-boiled tough egg, two-fisted beer drinking labor negotiator to keep his opponents off-balance. He took over a splintered Faculty in 1970 and in the next several years knit the deeply-rooted divisions back together, sending independent-minded reformers either into disarray or scurrying for the center. As Otto von Bismarck had once manipulated German liberals into supporting his reunification efforts, so did Harvard's Iron Chancellor unite most of the Faculty, restoring a certain reverence for his office that had been absent for some time. Even most of Dunlop's erstwhile...

Author: By Daniel Swanson, | Title: Good-Bye, John: An Adversary Departs | 6/14/1973 | See Source »

Much of the uncertainty stemmed from a belief that the disarray in Government caused by the Watergate scandal makes Washington's policy in guiding the economy especially difficult to predict...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: OUTLOOK: Obituary for the Boom | 6/4/1973 | See Source »

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