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

...narrow, three-story brick building at 2112 M Street in Georgetown looks as ordinary as any structure in the District of Columbia. But in the refrigerators that cram its rooms are germs of the world's most terrible diseases. Close beside them are beneficial bugs that flavor cheeses, and turn grain into beer. Last week this microbe zoo was preparing to add another class of inmate: cultures of cells from higher animals, such as cancer cells...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Microbe Zoo | 7/25/1960 | See Source »

...viewers with alarm were Sister Michael Marie* and Dr. Matthew Ferguson, who saw most of their cases of heat illness at St. Vincent's Hospital, among Manhattan's bakeoven brick and brownstone pueblos. Doctors have long since dropped the lay term "sunstroke" because, they note, heat can strike down a man in the shade almost as readily. Actually, say the St. Vincent's physicians, there may be a dozen forms of heat illness. Some of them "are true medical emergencies, and any hesitation or indecisiveness in their diagnosis and treatment may result in death...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: It's the Heat | 7/25/1960 | See Source »

...Sunday Express proudly. "White City'' in this context means the British Broadcasting Corp.'s new TV headquarters, and not the nearby White City stadium, where England's eager bettors wager millions on the greyhounds. BBC's half-finished complex of glass and brick is the largest TV factory in the world and even includes a studio that can be flooded to create a lake set. It represents a .$45 million bet that the state-chartered, viewer-financed (for an annual fee of $11.20 per set owner) BBC-TV can crack U.S. domination of world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BUSINESS ABROAD: Auntie Steps Out | 7/11/1960 | See Source »

...dentists. Whitehill remembers that "the railway tracks at Back Bay Station formed a sharp line of demarcation between two worlds. Elsewhere buildings on the 'wrong side of the tracks' were usually of wood and in a tumble-down condition, but. . . the blocks around the Latin School were of red brick or brown stone, symmetrically and even handsomely designed. There was no doubt, even to a schoolboy, that the South End was the wrong side...

Author: By Rober W. Gordon, | Title: Boston: Unchanging Evil Spinster | 7/5/1960 | See Source »

...shijne and an industry. A quarter-million tourists a year, 25,000 from the U.S., pour into this medieval town in the green-girt Cotswolds to poke curiously through Anne Hathaway's neighboring cottage and peer reverently at Shakespeare's crypt in Holy Trinity Church. The red brick Stratford Memo rial Theater receives 1,000,000 ticket requests annually, is forced to turn down four out of five. The lucky ducat holders this year will pay $500,000 to sit on three sides...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE STAGE: To Man From Mankind's Heart | 7/4/1960 | See Source »

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