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

...long-awaited clash between Harvard and Medical Area union organizers finally came to a head this week, as the National Labor Relations Board began hearings on whether to grant the Medical Area Employees Organizing Committee's petition to hold a union-forming election...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Slow-Moving Clash | 3/22/1975 | See Source »

Jurivich, said a tentative clash with Brown is set for late April, with the eventual hope of scheduling at least one meet a week, probably with clubs in the Boston area...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Untried Radcliffe Track Squad Gains Funding From Harvard | 3/22/1975 | See Source »

Texas lacks much use for intellectual concerns, but it is not so much anti-intellectual s simply unintellectual. Its driving ambition and vigorous energy, channelled into business and agriculture, do not clash with intellectual preoccupations, but instead diverge from them. McMurtry laments that condition, but retains a grudging admiration for the state's "freshness, vigor, openness, undepleted energy, and - most importantly--undepleted possibility...

Author: By Stephen J. Chapman, | Title: Cowboys, Oil and Braggadocio | 3/12/1975 | See Source »

Harvard's varsity skaters, hoping to earn a ticket to the National Championships next week, clash with Cornell tonight in the ECAC playoff semifinals as they return to Boston Garden, the scene of their only ECAC loss this year, for a 9 p.m. faceoff...

Author: By Elizabeth P. Eggert, | Title: Skaters Clash With Cornell in ECAC Semifinals | 3/7/1975 | See Source »

...make a considerable profit, he was ultimately forced to pull strings in order to be able to produce it. Acquaintances, he will tell you, do everything here. In-groupness and cliques are inevitable in the non-professional atmosphere of college theater, where one is constantly dealing with acquaintances. Personalities clash; objectivity is abandoned. Outsiders to certain groups are either distrusted or simply unwanted. At the Loeb, where mainstage productions almost always operate in the red, to say that an original show was rejected on the grounds that it was simply a financial risk is a feeble excuse...

Author: By Janny P. Scott, | Title: Getting the Ear of the Loeb | 2/27/1975 | See Source »

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