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

...leaving the league without a team in the nation's biggest TV market. The Houston Texans have shifted to Shreveport, La. Attendance at some games is dismal: 750 recently turned out at Philadelphia's 100,000-seat J.F.K. Stadium on a rainy night to see the Bell play, and fan support league-wide has fallen sharply below expectations. Reports of overdue paychecks are rampant; members of the Florida Blazers have gone six weeks without salary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: The W.F.L. Blowout | 11/4/1974 | See Source »

...David Bell-explaining that his father, Daniel Bell, professor of Sociology, was away in Japan--handed out peanuts while restraining a ferocious-looking terrier...

Author: By Amanda Bennett, Wendy B. Jackson, Seth M. Kupferberg, and Richard Shepro, S | Title: Most Faculty Acknowledge Halloween | 11/1/1974 | See Source »

Asked why he himself was not trick-or-treating, the 12-year-old Bell smiled disdainfully. "I gave it up a year ago," he explained. "Unlike some people...

Author: By Amanda Bennett, Wendy B. Jackson, Seth M. Kupferberg, and Richard Shepro, S | Title: Most Faculty Acknowledge Halloween | 11/1/1974 | See Source »

While giving out yellow and red lolly pops, Wilson told about "three lovely Harvard students" who had rung the bell and, without a word, "just piled us with candy...

Author: By Amanda Bennett, Wendy B. Jackson, Seth M. Kupferberg, and Richard Shepro, S | Title: Most Faculty Acknowledge Halloween | 11/1/1974 | See Source »

Radio Beacon. Further observations by Hewish and other radio astronomers soon put this tantalizing speculation to rest but eventually confirmed that a pulsar is a neutron star. Space, in fact, seems to be full of neutron stars. Since Hewish and his assistant, Jocelyn Bell, found the first one, about 100 more have been identified by astronomers. A neutron star is a bizarre object. It is formed when a giant star exhausts its nuclear fuel and collapses inward on itself, crushing much of its matter into a ball of neutrons some ten miles in diameter-but so dense that a thimbleful...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: From Plastics to Pulsars | 10/28/1974 | See Source »

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