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

News Releases & Handbills. The Government's massive and well-organized evidence was presented to the jury by Assistant U.S. Attorney John Wall, 32, a former paratrooper and Army intelligence officer. In addition to snowing several film clips, Wall read militant handbills and news releases issued by the defendants, bearing such titles as "Civil Disobedience Against the War" and "A Call to Resist Illegitimate Authority." Wall challenged the defendants' not-guilty pleas by quoting Dr. Spock, who in December had told FBI men: "I'm well aware that I could wind up in jail because of my illegal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Free Speech or Conspiracy? | 5/31/1968 | See Source »

...loss of light. Army researchers, under Electrical Engineer Robert S. Wiseman, known as "Mr. Night Vision" to his colleagues, overcame that hurdle by using fiber optics. These unusual lenses are made up of bundles of extremely thin glass fibers, each of which transmits light by bouncing it from wall to wall down the length of the fiber. With their glass-fiber lenses, the Fort Belvoir team not only kept the light in a straight line but prevented wasteful leakage out of the system...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Weapons: Taking the Night from Charlie | 5/31/1968 | See Source »

...Wall Posters. Randell makes money through a network of 581 part-time campus representatives, who earn up to $4,000 a year distributing samples, doing market research and peddling fad items. Last year, for example, they sold 55,000 paper dresses in 27 days for Mars Manufacturing Co., topped that by selling 100,000 personality and psychedelic wall posters (at $1 each). At a higher level, the company sold 105,000 youth air-fare identification cards for American Airlines-and kept $2 of the $3 price of each card for its effort. To help manufacturers boost sales of everyday products...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Marketing: Putting a Thesis to Work | 5/31/1968 | See Source »

Exeter first instituted its regulation against drugs and substitute highs with penalty of expulsion in the fall of 1966. It followed an incident in which two students who had eaten some of Dr. Schlein's Asmador Powder were, as one student who heard them, said, "Watching TV on the wall and seeing snakes on the shower floor." A friend brought them over to the infirmary to a doctor on the condiiton that the administration not be told. In a prep school community of about a thousand where everyone talks about everyone else, this was risky. The administration found...

Author: By Evan Vaughan, | Title: Notes From the Prep School Underground: Drugs and Love Ethic at Exeter, Andover | 5/29/1968 | See Source »

...Leonard did what he could to improve the driver to car ratio by stuffing last year's car into the first-turn wall during a test run. As a reward Granatelli hired him to drive number 60, which had originally been assigned to Mike Spence. It wasn't a bad move. When the first day of qualifying ended, Leonard held the pole position...

Author: By Stephen J. Potter, | Title: Turbines Will Dominate Memorial Day 500 | 5/29/1968 | See Source »

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