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Word: montana (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...about the same as ours per capita. However, by then Japan was already producing about three-fourths as much value in manufactured goods as the United States, or about one and one-half times as much per capita. Total Japanese land area is about the size of Montana...

Author: By Ezra F. Vogel, | Title: Japan's Challenge | 4/25/1980 | See Source »

Another student will ranch in Montana. Another will travel on a freighter up and down the East coast; another will travel to Europe on a tuna boat...

Author: By Larry Grafstein, | Title: Worshipping the Idol of Idle Idylls | 3/15/1980 | See Source »

...began airhitching, the last leg of a summer hitching to-fro' across America, by turning my back on I-90 and following the signs for the Billings, Montana airport. I had grown tired of hitching on a ramrod highway flopped down in dusty desolation and sustaining tin-diner towns. The west's rusticity and bo-hunk spirit sickened me. Two months on a ranch splitting wood, driving cattle, digging ditches, setting up fenceline, chewing tobacco, chasing chickens and pigs, and slaughtering sheep had sapped my pioneering, yahoo spirit. I longed for the sophisticated East, the blue rhapsody of New York...

Author: By Jim Tyson, | Title: Chariots of the Gods | 3/15/1980 | See Source »

...cruised at 4100 feet. He was a geologist at the University of Cincinnati and pointed out the geological characteristics of eastern Montana, South Dakota and Minnesota. His expertise at pointing out the finer points of the brown and barren land exemplified the extraordinary character of pilots who pick up riders. Like all kind hearted pilots he flew with a placid grin and talked on topics ranging from the future of Teng Hsio-ping to the amount of coal in South Dakota. He was one of the elite of American travelers, who moved not necessarily to see places but to feel...

Author: By Jim Tyson, | Title: Chariots of the Gods | 3/15/1980 | See Source »

...Pakistani province of Baluchistan, roughly the size of Montana or Finland, has long been considered a target of opportunity for the Soviet Union. Nestled next to Iran and Afghanistan, both of which have large Baluchi populations, the province has a 471-mile-long coast on the Arabian Sea. Gwadar, its principal port, sits at the entrance to the Persian Gulf and the oil lanes to the West. Moscow's intervention in Afghanistan has renewed fears of Soviet subversion in the province, where disaffected separatists have long been agitating for regional autonomy. TIME New Delhi Bureau Chief Marcia Ganger last...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PAKISTAN: A Province with Problems | 3/10/1980 | See Source »

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