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

...Dedijer has the style of a man who, though 51 and well-known, has never felt either old or "famous." At a party after his speech, the former Partisan colonel, Yugoslav delegate to the United Nations and high government leader exuberantly embraced old friends, sat on the floor, and drank beer with students twenty-five years his junior. A large man with a great shock of black hair, he looked like he would have been at home in the American Senate of the last century, trading stares with Webster and Calhoun. His energy appeared inexhaustable; the roles of journalist...

Author: By Rand K. Rosenblatt, | Title: Vladimir Dedijer | 5/5/1965 | See Source »

...hardly recognizable as a big man in sport: no glad hand, no ulcer, no cliché slogans. He never drank or smoked or swore or saw the inside of a nightclub. He was married to the same woman for 69 years. He did not care about money, and he rarely had much...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: College Football: The Coach | 3/26/1965 | See Source »

They mingled and they ate and they drank. When things loosened up, the crowd made room for indefatigable Luci Baines, who, with her father looking proudly on, gyrated through a vigorous Watusi, an arduous Frug, to such notable compositions as Monkey Climb and Walk Right...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Inauguration: The Man Who Had the Best Time | 1/29/1965 | See Source »

...University of London. Wherever he went, he persisted in self-experimentation. He had the blood supply to his arm shut off with a tourniquet until the arm was paralyzed, then watched another man move it with an electric current. To upset his body's acid-alkali balance, he drank ammonium chloride and panted for days afterward. To prove that "sunstroke" (properly, heat stroke) is not caused directly by the sun's rays, but by the overheating of the brain and spinal cord, he sat in Egypt's broiling sun for two hours, periodically dousing his head...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Genetics: Always a Good Show | 12/11/1964 | See Source »

Antennas & Thatch. Last week, while natives sang and guests drank a toast in kava (a paralyzing concoction of powdered pepper root and water), Idaho-born Governor H. Rex Lee dedicated an educational TV network that in two months of operation has transformed the islands. The net centers on a big (40,000 watts) transmitter, lifted to the top of 1,600-ft. Mt. Alava by a new, mile-long cable tramway that sways giddily over .Pago Pago Harbor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Growing Up in Samoa | 12/4/1964 | See Source »

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