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

...center and left side of the offensive line can continue to develop, a big weakness may turn into a plus factor for the Crimson, especially now that Harvard is limited to a running game...

Author: By Boisfeuillet JONES Jr., | Title: QB Zimmerman Shifted to Cornerback | 9/30/1965 | See Source »

...reminiscence would have followed an internal logic of its own. Zigmond, relying on the experiences and words of others, must develop his argument in a more formal way. He fails for two reasons. First, the abstractness and detachment of the essay simply do not fit a subject so intensely personal and emotionally complex. It is easy to list, in a neatly ordered manner, the "problems" faced by a white volunteer: guilt, fear, prejudice (both ways), self-doubt, etc. Such a list, however, provides about as much feel for the problems as would a similar list for the "horrors...

Author: By Curtis Hessler, | Title: MOSAIC | 9/28/1965 | See Source »

...beginning of this century. These men wanted "democracy from below" in the factories; SDS wants it in the slums. They wanted a sense of community in the factories; SDS wants that in the slums. And, like the pre-World War I radicals, SDS feels little need to develop a logically impenetrable justification in theory for what it does in practice...

Author: By Curtis Hessler, | Title: MOSAIC | 9/28/1965 | See Source »

Bloody well develop it. And so he does in the course of this minor, deft, deliciously droll and sometimes startlingly profound little novel by P. H. Newby (The Barbary Light, Revolution and Roses), the most ingenious and beguiling Puck to appear on the scene since Henry Green came popping out of the all-too-hollow log of contemporary English literature...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Ability to Loathe | 9/24/1965 | See Source »

Died. Hermann Staudinger, 84, German chemist and 1953 Nobel prizewinner, who fathered the age of plastics with his 1922 theory that large organic molecules derive their individual properties from orderly chainlike structures, hundreds of atoms long, thus making it possible for scientists to reproduce the structures synthetically, and develop such wonders as nylon (for silk) and Orion (for wool); of a stroke; in Freiburg, Germany...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Sep. 17, 1965 | 9/17/1965 | See Source »

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