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

...psychiatrists are going to cater to all of Harvard, they will have to learn to be more open minded; they will have to make their definition of sickness a little more elastic. They will, in effect, have to become a little more hip...

Author: By Stephen D. Lerney, | Title: Should You See Your Local Shrink? | 3/31/1967 | See Source »

...Allan Temko, 43, is the hip, peppery critic for the San Francisco Chronicle. He likes to think of himself as a cultural historian with a mass audience. "I have a well-developed jugular instinct when confronted with mediocrity," he says. In the six years he has written for the paper, he has drawn his share of blood. Almost singlehanded, he forced the Catholic Church to revise ultraconventional plans for a new cathedral; he caused the city to change its plans for a bridge spanning south San Francisco Bay. "What a graceful, avant-garde bridge," he says of the finished product...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: Civic Consciences | 3/31/1967 | See Source »

Part of BDAC's answer is to tap such teen-age idols as Paul Newman, whose hip and he-man manner make him an ideal narrator for its film Bennies and Goofballs, some 200 copies of which are now circulating among schools and youth groups. Even more effective are hard-hitting documentary films in which the cameras simply train on the young addicts themselves. Almost every junior high school student in Boston, for example, has seen the movie Hooked at least once in the past two years. In the film, one teen-ager straightforwardly tells how she once stole...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Youth: Turning Off | 3/31/1967 | See Source »

Three girls come in. Down the aisle in hip-huggers, and mini-skirts. The six turn and lust frantically...

Author: By John D. Reed, | Title: Harvard on $5 a Day | 3/24/1967 | See Source »

Nattily dressed, a junior accountant named Robert Philip Adler reported to his new job at the ailing Waterman Pen Co. one August day in 1955. He was no sooner in the office than he found him self in hip boots, helping to shovel up the muddy debris of a flood that had immersed the plant. Adler, now 33, has since cleaned up at pen making in an even bigger way. As president of the renamed and revivified Waterman-Bic Pen Corp., he has expanded the Milford, Conn., firm into the nation's leading manufacturer of ballpoint pens, with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Corporations: Mightier than the Pencil | 3/17/1967 | See Source »

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