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

Saxophonist Art Pepper's fight back from junkie to jazzman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: What Dues He Had to Pay | 5/26/1980 | See Source »

...Pepper was tense and perspiring, and he had not played a note yet. From the bandstand, he looked out at the opening-night crowd in Fat Tuesday's, a sleek Manhattan jazz club. "If you only knew the route," he said to them, "what I had to do, to get here...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: What Dues He Had to Pay | 5/26/1980 | See Source »

...British forces, none too keen on marching by and leaving an unprotected flank that trigger-happy colonials might pepper, marched on to the Common. Their commander ordered the farmers to lay down their weapons and disperse--and, since the alternative was to be shot, most of the Minutemen began to do just that. But as they walked slowly off the Common, someone fired a single shot. Whatever its source, it incited the British-- disobeying orders not to fire, the regulars leveled one volley and then charged across the green, shooting and bayoneting the colonials...

Author: By William E. Mckibben, | Title: Patriots Day--The Revolution 205 Years Later | 4/22/1980 | See Source »

...recordings of "South" and "Moten Swing" by the Benny Moten Orchestra, descendant of the Oklahoma City Blue Devils and ancestor of the Count Basie band, play under the opening and closing credits; the only other period music accompanies the brief snippets of antique footage--Basie, Turner, Young, Parker--that pepper the body of the film. These are truly gratifying. "We were doing rock and roll before anybody heard of it." Turner grumbles. We have all heard this sort of talk before, but a 1955 clip of Turner performing his "Shake, Rattle, and Roll" (later covered by Bill Haley, Chubby Checker...

Author: By Paul Davison, | Title: Kansas City Lovin' | 4/12/1980 | See Source »

Wearing plaid dress shirts, sporting a salt-and-pepper beard and puffing away at a pipeful of Amphora, Solomon looks more like a refugee from a sculpture class than a central banker. In fact, he is. In the two years before taking up his Treasury Department post, Solomon spent full time chipping away at blocks of white oak or molding bronze in his suburban Washington studio. His style in sculpture is modern semiabstract, but in money politics his mode is classic conservative...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Newest Gnome | 2/4/1980 | See Source »

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