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

...high-fat diet, made the world cholesterol-conscious with scores of monographs, weight-reducing clinics and diet-watching "Anti-Coronary Clubs"; from complications of diabetes; in New York City, where he was named the first Bureau of Nutrition director in 1949, continued to serve until last week although blind and restricted to a wheel chair since...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Aug. 11, 1961 | 8/11/1961 | See Source »

...Phillips Brooks House needs recording tape for the benefit of blind students at Harvard. Students who will not need their language lab tapes after this summer are asked to leave the reels with Mrs. Gelinaeu, lab secretary, who will give them...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Summer Notes | 8/10/1961 | See Source »

...Harvard men in Washington, showed Kennedy sitting in a rocking chair knitting while U.S. prestige declined. On the two crucial issues of the New Frontier so far -Laos and Cuba - Mauldin has hit as hard as anyone: Khrushchev amiably consumes a fowl (Laos) as Kennedy looks on, a blind Kennedy is flung heels over head by a Seeing-Eye dog (the CIA) hot on the trail of a skunk clearly meant to be Cuba. "Once Kennedy was President," says Mauldin, "I didn't even give him the usual 100 days of grace. I stung him hard...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Hit It If It's Big | 7/21/1961 | See Source »

...stressing the general practitioner and his elastic fee to stressing group practice by specialists with most costs prepaid. Last week the American Medical Association, a group not prone to accept change gladly, acknowledged the trend by installing as president a group-practice specialist who says that "medicine cannot be blind to social change...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The A.M.A. & the U.S.A. | 7/7/1961 | See Source »

This much is a story of indifference; the court trial that frames it is a drama-and occasionally a melodrama-of incomprehension. The judges who try Dominique refuse to believe that she shot her man in blind despair growing out of her love for him, not premeditated spite. They listen stolidly when her defense attorney tells them that she had been treated heartlessly, hide flickering lust with censoriousness when the prosecution relentlessly details her love affairs. Hopelessly, she lashes at the judges: they are old men in silly robes, they cannot understand, they are dead. That night she commits suicide...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Serious Brigitte | 7/7/1961 | See Source »

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