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

...plot is simple enough. Hampton Hurl, the Director of NATCHURAD (the Peace Corps), receives orders from a relative who is Higher Up that he must personally lead a Corps mission to the tiny island of South Embalmo, PEQ. By foul and fair means, he recruits some volunteers, and flies to the island, where, to his pleased surprise, he soon solves an important South Embalmo problem: men. For, as chief Mama Tia explains, South Embalmo has no males in its population. Idyllic problem-solving days pass, until Hurl learns that Noose Publications is planning a feature on the Corps...

Author: By Joseph L. Featherstone, | Title: Peace Decorum | 3/22/1962 | See Source »

Another capable singing actor is Peter Gesell, playing the lead role as Hampton Hurl. Unhappily, he has to carry the burden of much of the dialogue, and his part suffers for it. In the second act, though, he breaks loose from the stale and the hackneyed, and the result is pleasing in at least two songs, "Think Right" and "My Friend...

Author: By Joseph L. Featherstone, | Title: Peace Decorum | 3/22/1962 | See Source »

...enough, the movement was launched by McClure's not with any high impulse toward reform but as a coldly calculated device to boost circulation. Soon the new journalism of exposure was taken up by a score of magazines- Munsey's, Cosmopolitan, Collier's, Everybody's, Hampton's, the Independent, the American Magazine. They all followed the same formula, and they ranged far for new public enemies, setting their sights on everything from New York's Trinity Church to Georgia's prison system...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: A Time for Anger | 12/22/1961 | See Source »

...Atlanta's Morehouse is a highly selective producer of Negro leaders; its President Benjamin Mays is perhaps the best-known Negro educator in the U.S. Not far behind these three are Alabama's Tuskegee, where Botanist George Washington Carver did his work, and Virginia's Hampton Institute, the nation's most richly endowed ($19 million) private Negro college...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Negro Colleges | 12/15/1961 | See Source »

Social Saviour. To see the Met open its 77th season, the audience paid a record-breaking $94,294.50 at the box office, with orchestra seats going for $45 apiece and an eight-seat box for $650. The crowd was enthusiastic, glittering (inveterate Social Moth Hope Hampton, a onetime operatic hopeful, appeared splattered with sequins, chinchilla and diamonds), but, as Columnist Cholly Knickerbocker reminded his readers, scarcely Top Drawer. The Old Guard, as opposed to Publiciety, celebrates the opening on the second Monday of the season. What saved the night socially, according to Knickerbocker, was the presence of Labor Secretary Arthur...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Old Horse, New Saddle | 11/3/1961 | See Source »

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