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Word: utterers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...utter courtship ended, tokens...

Author: By Patrick Odonnell, | Title: Berryman's Sonnets | 10/14/1967 | See Source »

...nine, twelve. As the tension mounted, 24 Cardinals came to bat, and not one got a hit. At last, with two out in the eighth, St. Louis' Julian Javier looped a hanging slider into leftfield for a double. Lonborg threw his hands to his face. "It was utter agony," he said later. "I really thought I had it." What he had was plenty good enough. Retiring the next four batters, he gave Boston a 5-0 shutout to even everything up, and copped the fourth one-hitter ever in World Series history...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Baseball: Heroic Tale | 10/13/1967 | See Source »

...McLuhan, 56, to come down for a year's guest professorship. In his very first lecture, McLuhan told his 178 students that the Viet Nam war is "an all-outeducational effort" and that TV is "an Xray machine." The one student who tried to take notes dissolved in utter confusion. But the rest were turned on-to say nothing of the reporters at a press conference where McLuhan went on about orchestra conductors ("janitors") and the separation of church and state ("outlived its usefulness"). "It was a good show," said campus Editor George Thomas. "He performed wonderfully...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Sep. 29, 1967 | 9/29/1967 | See Source »

...that Ines Perez the 5-ft. 4-in., 149-lb. Mexican passer and Jerry Levias, the 5-ft. 10-in., 175-Ib. Negro receiver, were not junior high schoolers at all. They were members of the Southern Methodist University varsity. The reaction to that news might well have been utter disbelief...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Football: Mites for Openers | 9/29/1967 | See Source »

Faced with O'Neill's rhetorical soliloquies and the awkward device of having characters utter their unspoken thoughts, Director José Quintero apparently folded his hands in slothful reverence. When it came to cutting the script by three hours, however, he became indiscriminately agile, severing vital tendons of continuity, meaning, mood and theme. O'Neill had specified that the play be destroyed if he could not revise it, and after a fashion, Quintero has obliged. What remains is a remnant of O'Neill's melancholy conviction that hell hath no fury quite like a human...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: O'Neill's Last Long Remnant | 9/22/1967 | See Source »

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