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

...land of typhoons and earth quakes, carrier pigeons have proved themselves reliable disaster insurance, able to get through with photographic negatives (up to 20 frames of 35 mm. film in a plastic capsule) where modern communications are blacked out. The pigeons broke into journalism when the great 1923 earthquake turned Tokyo into a shambles, forced editors to rely on a small signal-corps flock. The birds soon earned the title "Hato-san."* As recently as 1959, when a typhoon smashed the industrial city of Nagoya, leaving telephone and wirephoto services dead, the Nagoya Chubu Nippon used its 200 birds...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: No Sayonora for Hato-san | 1/31/1964 | See Source »

...flock of 150. Yomiuri Shimbun has just completed new concrete dovecotes, plans to expand its present 20-bird flock to at least 100 in time for the Olympic Games that take place next fall, just 15 winged minutes across Tokyo-and smack in the middle of the typhoon season...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: No Sayonora for Hato-san | 1/31/1964 | See Source »

...standstill, credit is nonexistent, foreign investment has vanished - all because Dictator Ne Win insists on instant, total socialism. Burma has 1,370 miles of mountainous border with Red China, and, says an Eastern European diplomat, "practicing socialism in such proximity to Communism is like walking a tightrope in a typhoon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Burma: The Way to Socialism-- & Havoc | 8/30/1963 | See Source »

...been blown off the tightrope, has man aged to maintain what passes for neutrality: mildly hostile toward the U.S., friendly toward China (without, however, endorsing Peking's attack against India), friendlier toward Moscow-and, of course, accepting aid from all three. But domestically, the typhoon is causing havoc...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Burma: The Way to Socialism-- & Havoc | 8/30/1963 | See Source »

Apart from the celluloid clichés, there is a legitimate drama to the whole monstrous crime, and Uris captures some of it. Unfortunately, the scale of racial mass murder dwarfs the individual. The enormity of horror resembles a cataclysm of nature like an earthquake or a typhoon, and the inequity of the struggle smothers the tragic sense, which demands a more equal conflict in which the hero duels with himself, with another man or with God. Man's fate as it unfolds in Mila 18 contains the hound-after-fox emotions of the chase and the kill, sometimes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Back to The Wall | 6/2/1961 | See Source »

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