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Word: mud (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

Most of Li's men live in mud and straw huts, raise rice and vegetables on tiny hillside farms. Some have settled down with Burmese girls but most still yearn for their families in Yunnan, and some secretly visit their kinfolk from time to time. A bold attempt last year to move large numbers of their dependents from Red Yunnan ended in bloody failure: the Communists seized 800 oldsters and children, and none has been heard of since...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DANGER ZONES: Last Ditch Army | 5/18/1953 | See Source »

...summer monsoon broke over leafy Luang Prabang in a deluge. Huddled in steaming rubber capes, the French Union troops waited for the expected Viet Minh Communist attack. It did not come. The valleys beneath the great frowning mountains ran rivers of mud, but no Communist soldier waded them, nor was there one to be seen anywhere. Laotians, worshiping in the temple of the celebrated Golden Buddha, had predicted that the Communists would never capture the sacred city of Luang Prabang. Had their predictions proved true...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BATTLE OF INDO-CHINA: Monsoon Mystery | 5/18/1953 | See Source »

Yale had the power, Yale had the depth, and Yale had the finesse, the experts said. Yet for almost three periods, the Crimson trampled the Eli reputation deep into the mud of the Business School Field...

Author: By Hiller B. Zobel, | Title: Yale Lacrosse Team Wins 11-7 Over An Underdog Crimson Ten Saturday | 5/18/1953 | See Source »

...paddies. It is a happy land, where plump little children stand beside the road, laugh and wave to passing automobiles, where slender farm girls, with water jars balanced gracefully on their heads, smile shyly before covering their faces with colorful head cloths. Old men sit in the doorways of mud huts, contentedly puffing on long-stemmed hookahs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDIA: A Man on Foot | 5/11/1953 | See Source »

Being a war correspondent in the 1860s was in some ways tougher than being an infantryman. The foot soldier had to contend with nothing worse than mud, hardtack and the enemy's shot & shell. The war correspondent had to face all these things plus the wrath and distrust of such generals as William Tecumseh Sherman: "Dirty newspaper scribblers." Sherman called them. "They come into camp, poke about among the lazy shirks and pick up their camp rumors and publish them as facts ... I will treat them as spies, which in truth they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Scribblers & Generals | 5/11/1953 | See Source »

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