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Word: wallopings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Behrendt's wallop can no longer be measured by its impact in Amsterdam. Without any help from his paper, he has managed to syndicate himself on a global scale. His work appears regularly in 40 papers from West Germany to Japan, including two in New York (the Herald Tribune and the Sunday Times), and obviously will soon spread farther...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Therapeutic Pen | 10/13/1961 | See Source »

...knew just where to direct his sullen anger: at a baseball. Leaning into a low fastball thrown by Baltimore's Milt Pappas, Maris sent a whistling drive soaring high into the rightfield seats. It was his 59th homer in 154 games; he had come within one heart-stopping wallop of tying baseball's most dramatic and cherished record: the 60 home runs hit by George Herman Ruth in 1927 (seven years before Maris was born...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: The Making of a Hero | 9/29/1961 | See Source »

...louder and louder. The whistle wails, and the monstrous noise comes on and on and on and on, straight at the listener. His eyes pop open, his hands grip the arms of his chair in sweaty terror. His eyebrows shoot up past his hairline. As the final shattering wallop thunders in his head, the train runs right smack over him and he topples backward in a shuddering trance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Leisure: Stereo, Left & Right | 9/22/1961 | See Source »

...Breed. Yesterday's sports sections bristled with evasions of perfectly useful words: four-ply wallop for homerun, apple for baseball, henhouse hoist for foul ball. When athletes were injured, claret flowed, not blood. On one occasion, the Herald Tribune's Sports Editor Stanley Woodward, outraged at receipt of a story in which some ballplayer "belted" a homerun, whipped off his own belt, waved it before the eyes of the transgressor, and bellowed: "Did you ever see anyone hit a baseball with one of these...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Good Sports | 9/1/1961 | See Source »

Voodoo & Vulnerability. Mauldin packs a wallop that can be absorbed in seconds-and seconds, as he well knows, are all his work will get from the Post-Dispatch's readers (circ. 406,947) and the other 10 million in his 99-newspaper syndication. He understands even better-as many of his colleagues seem to forget -that editorial cartooning is essentially an aggressive art, aimed at the belly rather than the brain. Mauldin never defends; he attacks. The difference between an editorial cartoon and the editorial across the page, he says, is "the difference between a sergeant's whistle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Hit It If It's Big | 7/21/1961 | See Source »

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