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

...relief sewer will supplement the overloaded storm and sanitation system built under Mount Auburn St. over 70 years ago, Owen said...

Author: By Michael A. Calabrese, | Title: New Sewage System Will Aid Charles River Pollution Control | 9/30/1976 | See Source »

Cronin's, on the corner of Mt. Auburn St, next to the Treadway, is still my favorite bar around here. It used to be where Holyoke Center is now, and was the center of Harvard drinking activity, but got moved to this rather odd location when Harvard decided to go bureacratic. It's usually pretty empty now, and is always quiet (particularly because the high booths and ferocious waitresses don't invite rowdiness), but it has a great jukebox--one which you can hear, a distinct difference from the music at 33 Dunster Street, where they play good music...

Author: By Gay Seidman, | Title: miscellany | 9/30/1976 | See Source »

...Penny, under the Blue Parrot on Mt. Auburn St., has live music too, but it tends toward the folkish and is always full of rather bizarre people who are looking for someone to pick up. Not cheap, but they have a better selection of wines than most places around--although if you're setting yourself up as a wine connoisseur, you should probably go to the Wine Bar in the garage instead--but prepared to spend...

Author: By Gay Seidman, | Title: miscellany | 9/30/1976 | See Source »

Reverend Paulanne Balch is also a member of the Old Cambridge Baptist Church and is a graduate of Andover-Newton School. She is presently a chaplain at Mt. Auburn Hospital. She says that "born again" is the experience of psychic birth marked by a profound sense of self-recognition and participation in one's life and culture. There is an acknowledgment of the condition of one's life and an experience of pain connected with the loss of illusions. Then a descent, a letting go. Finally, she adds, there's a resurrection where the body is healed; "the scales fall...

Author: By Janice L. Cox, | Title: Defining 'Born Again' | 9/28/1976 | See Source »

Students and alumni are often outnumbered in the stands by zealots whose sole link to college is football. Ralph ("Shug") Jordan, who retired in 1975 after 25 years as head coach at Auburn University, describes the "adopted" alumni: "It goes back to the Depression down here, when most folks could not afford to go to college, but they could take pride in and link themselves to a Southern football team. So you would become known as an Auburn man or an Alabama man, and people would assume you went to school there. You bonded with a team, and it became...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The South/sport: Eat 'Em Up, Get 'Em! | 9/27/1976 | See Source »

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