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Word: bowlings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

Conversation, an exact art cultivated behind the somber oak doors of his club, reached grotesque proportions when it moved outdoors to the punch bowl, or shade tree, or Wigglesworth steps. Restraint, always a gentleman's religion, had given way to a type of familiarity which Vag thought rude and unpleasant. Grossly unpleasant...

Author: By Edmund B. Games jr., | Title: A Man Is an Island | 7/10/1958 | See Source »

...both biographies suggest, money on a big scale becomes a kind of magic potion. Common crotchets are taken for the stigmata of genius; petty fears mushroom to paranoia. A Gulbenkian day began with setting-up exercises. Swedish massage and a bowl of yoghurt. Mr Five Per Cent was a health faddist, and for a time lived on a massive diet of carrots washed down with turnip juice. His father had lived to 106. and Gulbenkian fully expected to reach 120. To avoid dust, he sat only on leather cushions, slept on a leather mattress...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Solid Gold Scrooge | 6/23/1958 | See Source »

Just as the wheat farmers and cattlemen in the old dust-bowl area saw success ahead with lots of rain, big crops and good prices, along-as always-came something else. Last week, in millions of waving green acres of western Kansas, eastern Colorado, and extending north into Nebraska and south into the Texas Panhandle and New Mexico, the something else was the promise of the worst grasshopper plague in 20 years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FARMERS: Grasshoppers Coming | 6/16/1958 | See Source »

...Harvard cricket team was scoring the 150th of its eventual 159 runs at Soldiers Field yesterday, one of the Yale camp followers somewhat facetiously commented that now he knew how Crimson followers felt in the Yale Bowl last fall...

Author: By William C. Sigal, | Title: Varsity Cricketers Down Yale, 159-48; Gracious Gesture Prevents Greater Rout | 5/31/1958 | See Source »

...uneven level of photographic achievement. The high-points are some very nice portraits of professors and several pictures best described as "moody." There are many candidates for the low-point, but the worst would seem to be the PBH photographs that appear to have been taken through a bowl of split pea soup. Many other photographs are out of focus, poorly lit, and just plain dull. (Not to mention the upside-down shot on page 231.) One of the most annoying technical failures of the Yearbook photographers is their apparent inability to decide what constitutes a true black--had they...

Author: By Robert H. Sand, | Title: Three Twenty Two | 5/21/1958 | See Source »

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