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

...bugs are mostly concealed in diplomatic offices, cars and homes, where they are often as thick as cockroaches. A favorite spot is under or even in a bed, where the bugs might pick up useful leads for blackmail. For many U.S. families in Iron Curtain countries, sleuthing for bugs has become a kind of sport, an indoor counterpart to the Easter egg hunt. One couple in a satellite capital boasts that its cocker spaniel can sniff out a bug as surely as a pig snuffling a truffle. But new bugs always take their place...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Espionage: The Little Ears | 7/28/1961 | See Source »

When McCall's shook up its editorial staff, put on a thick, new coat of makeup and launched a hair-pulling drive to the top of the women's magazine field 2½ years ago, the rival Ladies' Home Journal reacted as any proper Philadelphia dowager would. The Journal, tops in the field for two decades, publicly treated this lipsticked hussy with icy silence, confined its comments to catty asides. "It's fun to be challenged,'' said Editors Bruce and Beatrice Blackmar Gould, faintly amused. Their amusement turned to dismay as McCall...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Battle Among the Women | 7/28/1961 | See Source »

Curious Crouch. Hunched into his curious, knock-kneed crouch, holding his thick-handled bat like a broomstick (with his hands six inches apart), Cobb was a remarkably versatile hitter. He could bunt, hit line drives or ground balls, place his hits almost at will. Never noted as a longball hitter, he nevertheless led the American League in home runs in 1909 (with nine), once hit five in two consecutive games-a mark Babe Ruth never matched. Asked to compare Cobb and Ruth, Cleveland Outfielder Tris Speaker once said: "Babe was a great ballplayer, but Cobb was even greater. Ruth could...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: The Guileful Magician | 7/28/1961 | See Source »

When geophysicists tag the rock strata under the ocean, they call the ocean water the first layer. On the bottom is the second layer: sediment and sedimentary rock averaging 1 km. thick. Below it lies the third layer, which seismic waves have proved to be made of unusually heavy rock. The third layer is normally unreachable, but scientists making a seismic survey in 1959 got hints that it might be exposed on the sides of the Puerto Rico Trench. In 1960 Dr. Earl Hays of Woods Hole took photographs showing fractured rock on the trench's north wall...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Rocks from the Depths | 7/21/1961 | See Source »

Eyes fixed on the ground and thick arms hanging limp at his sides, he stepped from the mound and shuffled toward the shadowed dugout, looking for all the world like a dejected pitcher who had just been shelled out of a crucial game. Only when his teammates swarmed about to pat his back and the Independence Day crowd of 74,246 at Yankee Stadium* cut loose with a tumultuous roar did a faint grin flicker across the lips of Edward ("Whitey") Ford, the New York Yankees' crafty southpaw pitcher. Whitey Ford had just won his ninth straight game...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: That '61 Ford | 7/14/1961 | See Source »

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