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

...estimated 1,000 lbs. per sq. ft., which is four times as much weight as modern, specially strengthened storage buildings are designed to carry. A few weeks back, a 40-lb. chunk of stone plummeted from the facade to the ground below; now Congressmen and visitors have to walk through a protective wooden tunnel, hardly in keeping with the dignity of the building, to get to the main entrance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Capital: The Falling Front | 8/19/1966 | See Source »

...than for Hoi Pham, that reaction was a near miracle. For two months the child had stoically borne a pain in her neck that gradually forced her head toward her shoulder at a grotesque 30° angle. With paralysis from strangulation of her spinal column, she could no longer walk, could barely move her arms. A corpsman took Hoi Pham to Project Viet Nam civilian doctors, who have volunteered to care for civilians (TIME, May 20). With no neurosurgeon among them, they referred her to the Navy. Dr. Pitlyk found that Hoi Pham had been walking around with a broken...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Doctors: Spare Time in Viet Nam | 8/19/1966 | See Source »

...march was questioning not only the American position in the war, but the correctness of many of the country's most fundamental institutions and practices. For example, in Dorchester, as the marchers approached a church, a group of children who had been following them began to yell, --"Don't walk by a Catholic church... Don't walk by, you're not good enough." There seemed to be an ambivalent feeling: the spectators seem to assume that the marchers felt superior to everyone else; the natural response were constant taunts of "scum." Nor, in many cases, did the marchers' response dispel...

Author: By Robert J. Samuolson, | Title: "We Don't Ask Police For Protection" -- Tale Of CNVA's Peace Walk | 8/12/1966 | See Source »

...When I walk alone," he explained last Sunday, "it's easy to stop and talk with someone. Here it's almost the opposite. We're all carrying signs and nobody wants to stop...

Author: By Robert J. Samuolson, | Title: "We Don't Ask Police For Protection" -- Tale Of CNVA's Peace Walk | 8/12/1966 | See Source »

...this makes for the peculiar brand of CNVA activism--it is far more morally than politically motivated. It is the kind of activism that prompts John Phillips to set out on a personal peace walk, unannounced and unpublicized, from Boston to Providence. "I would just saunter along and start to talk to people," Phillips says. He had hoped that the Boston to Provincetown march would do the same thing on a larger scale, but even from his perspective, it is proving a mild disappointment...

Author: By Robert J. Samuolson, | Title: "We Don't Ask Police For Protection" -- Tale Of CNVA's Peace Walk | 8/12/1966 | See Source »

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