Word: weirdly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Before long, New Yorkers were reading such whimsical ads as "Diane Shugrue ate 3,925 Dilly Beans last month. She didn't gain an ounce. (Is she tired of Dilly Beans!)" Radio listeners were subjected to a barrage of zany plugs interspersed with 20 seconds of weird "music to eat Dilly Beans by." One ad advised: "If your neighborhood grocer doesn't have a jar, knock something off the shelf on the way out." So many customers took it seriously that some grocers complained, and Dilly Bean changed its advice, now lightly urges frustrated customers: "Move to another...
...whole bunch of questions: 'You got any strange habits?' and all that stuff. So I mean, what the hell do they expect you to feel in there? You tell them...then after a while you say what's the use of telling them guys...This was a weird looking --. Just like a regular guy you see in the movies: bushy hair, thick glasses, mustache. His eyes looked like they went right through you. He was only there about 15 or 20 minutes. Then he says, 'If your mother and someone else's mother were in a room nude, which...
...League, much to the delight of publicity men and attendance-concious athletic directors and to the frustration of coaches and bookies, is as weird as ever. Yale, Princeton, and Dartmouth are doing better than expected; Columbia, Pennsylvania, and Cornell are somewhat disappointing. And then here is Brown, which should get sick of losing about the time the Bruins come to Cambridge, and Harvard, which is a little off the pace without Charlie Ravenel but nonetheless very much in contention for the title...
...subseqeunt studies, Schiele twists his features more than ever, further delineates the bone structure in the emaciated face and body, effects a weird but rich skin tone by combining patches of green and red, and elongates and contorts his limbs to further emphasize his agony...
...village green in Danbury, part in a church steeple, and the rest on the roof of a house on Main Street, inviting them all to play together. By the time young Charles Ives got to Yale, he was already shocking his instructors with his own experiments on weird harmonies and erratic rhythms...