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

...people Gene encounters on that trip add nothing. This undistinguished group includes Barnes, a writer of insipid mysteries with titles like Death of a Deb; Flash, sports entrepreneur and president of the North American Curling League, Stella the Divorcee, an oversexed blob usually clad in "Omar the Tentmaker" originals who does things Erica Jong is afraid to even dream about; and Lizzie, a confirmed epicurean who thinks truck stops are the "best places...

Author: By Judy Bass, | Title: Sluggish Nonsense | 6/1/1977 | See Source »

With kilt-clad bagpipers wheezing Scotland the Brave in a cavernous hall filled with cheering, dancing and festive hugging, the scene might well have been a nationalist celebration in Edinburgh. But the hoopla last week was in Los Angeles, where Scottish-born Douglas Fraser, 60, assumed the presidency of the 1.4 million-member United Auto Workers at the union's triennial constitutional convention. First came an emotional farewell by retiring Leonard Woodcock, whom President Carter has named to head the U.S. liaison office in Peking. Then, after a brief, symbolic challenge by a black local union officer from Michigan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: Piping In a New Chief | 5/30/1977 | See Source »

Sunday afternoon found our weekend-worn ruggers in Braintree to battle Dartmouth for the Charles River Cup, in a game sponsored by the Charles River Dartmouth Club. The Crimson was seeing green, for the crowd, almost without exception, was clad in that distinctive Hanoverian shade. Those Greenies were so confident of victory that they had already engraved the cup, "Dartmouth 1977." Alas, they were correct...

Author: By Bob Baggott, | Title: Crimson Ruggers Drop Pair; Fall to Williams, Dartmouth | 5/2/1977 | See Source »

...event was definitely the thing. At one point the throng of 100 began to chant, "Orb, Orb, Orb!" building to a thunderous crescendo as their man, Dave Sherman '77, entered clad in a yellow bathrobe which served as his warmup suit. He slowly removed it, acknowledged his fans, flexed his muscles and went down to defeat in quick order. But no matter, the Mighty Orb headed for an early shower via the beer...

Author: By Daniel Gil, | Title: It's All in the Wrist | 4/27/1977 | See Source »

Sharing the limelight with Seltzer is Nancy Gustafson as Patience, the pure-hearted, affectation-hating country girl. Clad in a yellow and white dirndle, Gustafson acts the part with a winsome wholesomeness and devotion to duty. Her scenes with Archibald, particularly when she alternately begs him to "think of me sometimes" and warns him to "think of me sometimes" and warns him to "advance at your peril," are especially fine. But Gustafson's talents are most in evidence when she launches into song. Her strong, pure soprano elevates Patience's plight to operatic heights, her superb diction rarely obscuring Gilbert...

Author: By Julia M. Klein, | Title: More Functional Than Aesthetic | 4/26/1977 | See Source »

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