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

...Wittgenstein in New York, incorporated such city elements as jets, skyscrapers, and the man from a Bufferin ad to tick off hectic modern life. Roy Lichtenstein printed his Moonscape on metallic plastic that shimmers like aluminum foil. Claes Oldenburg made a serigraph print and attached a rust-colored felt tea...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Graphics: Mixed-Up Medium | 9/30/1966 | See Source »

...Tea & Tiger Balm. More and more, U.S. firms are using free travel as a sales incentive; this year 8,000 compa nies are sending crackerjack salesmen to such faraway places as Venice (RCA) or Pago Pago (Ford). Nobody does it as grandly as Gibson. The company is paying out $2,000,000 for jet charters alone, will spend another half million to quarter guests in Hong Kong's Manda rin and Hilton hotels and entertain them. Each dealer is furnished with a 40-coupon book of tickets entitling him to everything from a pot of Oriental welcoming tea...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Corporations: Goodbye Hong Kong, Hello Acapulco | 9/30/1966 | See Source »

Honey for Tea? Macmillan does not write so well as Churchill, who had the advantage of being a professional journalist and historian rather than a publisher, but far better than Attlee, whose notion of bringing out the interest in an interesting event was to say that it was a most interesting event. The Macmillan autobiography may seem stuffy, obliged as he is to outline the magnificent contours of a great world he never made, but which certainly made him. The principles of manufacture were sound, the workmanship solid. The figure that emerges from this is surprisingly sympathetic; a decent...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: SupermacLooks Back | 9/30/1966 | See Source »

...Cotters is one chicken in the pot, brought to the boil in saltless water and garnished with some dreadful cabbage; the local preoccupations are football pools, the union and the Labor Party, which replaced (but not satisfactorily) the chapel. The family Bible of the Cotter tribe, awash with tea and sympathetic misery, seems to be those old socialist classics-Robert Tressell's The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists, Lenin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Poor Nellie | 9/23/1966 | See Source »

...Lower Rio Grande Valley. But to thousands of Mexican-Americans in the area, one of Morse's 30-ft. acacias has suddenly become "God's tree," an object of awe and veneration. That particular acacia lost its anonymity in mid-July when a stream of tea-colored "water" began spewing from a knothole in a limb 25 ft. above the ground. Local Mexican-Americans soon saw religious significance in the "crying tree"; they began dropping by to touch it, rub its mysterious fluid on their bodies, and even to drink the stuff...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Botany: The Crying Tree | 9/16/1966 | See Source »

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