Word: mad
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...offensive interference penalty pushed the Elis back and on fourth down, dropped the snap from center. After a mad scramble, the Crimson's Wes Shofner recovered at the Yale...
...intellectual mortician-named Muldoon. A pugnacious Boston Irishman, Muldoon does a reckless reconstruct job on Bronson's Yankee soul-a rambling self-parody of scholarship which forms the loose frame of the novel. Understand Bronson, and you will understand America-"our present and our future." This is mad Muldoon's thesis...
...Mad Bronson, mad Muldoon, and mad Alonso may be right-this is the age of Ralph Disney Emerson. But what marvelously alive exceptions they make to the rule of blandness...
...polls. We're going to lay bare the U.S. machine and all the criminals and watchdogs within it. They're guiding the complete denial of any of our remaining constitutional rights. There's a conspiracy in the Senate to put the Panthers at the mercy of the racist mad dogs...
Soviet propaganda stepped up the tone even further. Using language reminiscent of the worst days of the cold war, Tass called the small, seven-seat U-8 Beechcraft a "warplane" and went on to claim that U.S. overseas bases were "hotbeds of aggression, intervention and espionage" created by "the mad desire of U.S. imperialism to dictate its will to all mankind." Pravda hinted that the U.S. had "reincarnated" the policies of John Foster Dulles. It also made an absurd comparison between the U-8's accidental overflight and the U-2 spy-plane affair of 1960. While...