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Word: armes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...Harvard lacrosse team played only hard enough to win on yesterday's bright and lazy late April afternoon. The laxmen cased into a 5-1 first quarter lead, and held out manned MIT at arm's length the rest of the way in posting a 13-7 victory on the Engineers' home turf. The victory brings Harvard's season mark...

Author: By Dennis P. Corbett, | Title: Lacrosse Team Stops Engineers, 13-7; MacKenzie Leads First Quarter Surge | 5/1/1975 | See Source »

...moved gingerly out of Cabot Living room. Evans came to a girl by the door and gripped her arm. "Did you get anything out of that back there?" he queried...

Author: By Sage Sohier, | Title: The Flaubert of Photographers | 5/1/1975 | See Source »

They buried Agnes McAnoy, 62, widow and mother of three, in Belfast last week. And Molly McAleavy, 57, mother of eleven. And Marie Bennett, 42, mother of seven. And Arthur Penn, 33, father of three. And Elizabeth Carson, 64, whose husband Willy lost an arm. Pathetic lines of mourners wept after the requiem at the Catholic Church of St. Matthew, half a mile from where the attackers had tossed a bomb into the crowded Strand bar in East Belfast...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NORTHERN IRELAND: The Bloody Truce | 4/28/1975 | See Source »

Died. Clyde Tolson, 74, J. Edgar Hoover's almost inseparable No. 2 man at the FBI for 42 years; of heart disease; in Washington, D.C. A taciturn lifelong bachelor, Tolson joined the fledgling bureau in 1928 and soon became what Hoover called "my strong right arm." Though his title was associate director (he was responsible for administration and investigation activities), Tolson handled a pistol convincingly in many of the spectacular arrests that built the FBI's G-man image in the 1930s. But mainly he was the director's loyal alter ego: he shared J. Edgar...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Apr. 28, 1975 | 4/28/1975 | See Source »

Louis talks with a certain nostalgia of the days--only ten years ago--when Atlantic Avenue was lined with fish stores and there were two large fish piers instead of one. "You should have seen it--this whole place." He waves his arm. Louis started fishing with his father 20 years ago and then took off on his own. His two brothers work at Great Atlantic Fish Co. and come to talk to him when he brings in the day's catch in the afternoon. Joe graduated from Harvard, class of '73, and started right on fishing with Louis...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Boston Fishermen | 4/25/1975 | See Source »

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