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

...away, tiny rockets called microjets are now being tried. No bigger than bullets, they are filled with a quick-burning propellant and launched in quick succession from a thin-walled, hand-held tube. Their chief advantages are light weight and silence. They operate not with a bang but a hiss...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Weapons: Tomorrow's Rifles | 8/14/1964 | See Source »

Jack Gelber's first play, The Connection, was set half a league to hellward of the boundary where bohemianism shades into crime and insanity. Its heroes were heroin addicts, its dialogue had the tape-recorder hiss of genuine desperation, and the result was a 32-month run off-Broadway. Gelber's first novel seemingly starts off to make that same scene. Marijuana smoke curls up from the pages; the characters are mostly Greenwich Village idiots. But though the chief idiot, Manny Fells, has lowered himself by his own bootstraps into the right kind of roach-ridden Manhattan loft...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Also Current: Jul. 24, 1964 | 7/24/1964 | See Source »

...became so popular that it soon grew into a sort of Rhodes scholarship of U.S. law. Clerking for the Supreme Court is now a launching pad for all kinds of later fame -be it heading the State Department (Dean Acheson), running U.S. Steel (Irving Olds), going to jail (Alger Hiss), becoming a leading sociologist (David Riesrnan), or returning as a Supreme Court Justice (Byron White). "It is much more than a meal ticket," explains one ex-clerk. "It's an incalculably valuable experience...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Supreme Court: The Job No Young Lawyer Can Afford to Turn Down | 6/5/1964 | See Source »

...editors are sticklers for detail, specialize in clarifying "what the law is," typically dug out the dusty minutes of an 1815 bank officers' meeting last winter in order to verify one quote. Among Harvard's star sticklers: the late Robert A. Taft, Dean Acheson, Alger Hiss, Justice Felix Frankfurter, Yale's new President Kingman Brewster...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Law Schools: From the Mouths of Babes | 4/24/1964 | See Source »

...Stanford's infant (1948) quarterly is high on punchy prose, has broken new ground ever since Volume I probed the legalities of rainmaking in a piece titled "Who Owns the Clouds?" Later it debunked Alger Hiss's contention that a "second" typewriter was used to frame him. In 1963 it examined the high-priced funeral industry well before Author Jessica Mitford's bestseller on the subject. Too new to have many famed alumni-Idaho's Senator Frank Church is one-the Stanford review this year boasts a girl president, Brooksley Born, 22, whose law-school grade...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Law Schools: From the Mouths of Babes | 4/24/1964 | See Source »

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