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Word: dirtiest (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Yale was the roughest and dirtiest team they faced this year, according to Eliot's captain, Dudley Blodgett...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Eliot Skaters Beat Yale To Win Intramural Title | 3/14/1967 | See Source »

...mild-mannered sophomore Barry Johnson got into a tussle with Ferguson and Harry Orr, probably the two dirtiest players in the East. The Crimson sophomore emerged with a fiveminute sentence for slashing matched against Orr's similar penalty for buttending...

Author: By Robert P. Marshall jr., | Title: Cornell Tops Sextet, 4-1 | 2/23/1967 | See Source »

...durable Red Chinese Premier Chou Enlai. Until last week Ta' Chu had been one of the few certified Mao heroes of the revolution, providing much of the verbal firepower for the purge. But Chiang Ching denounced Tao Chu last week as a "bourgeois reactionary," one of the dirtiest epithets in the Maoist lexicon; and immediately the Red Guards responded. One version, in fact, had it that Tao Chu had been publicly humiliated in the streets of Peking...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Red China: Dance of the Scorpion | 1/13/1967 | See Source »

Nowhere in the South was victory sweeter for the Republicans than in Arkansas, where Winthrop Rockefeller, 54, had to overcome both political tradition and a barrage of personal slurs by Democrat Jim Johnson, 41, a ranting segregationist who helped make the campaign one of the nation's dirtiest. Rockefeller, who gave Democratic Governor Orval Faubus a scare in the 1964 election, loosened up his campaign style, tightened up his party's fledgling apparatus, and let Jim Johnson undo himself. In the process, the nascent Arkansas G.O.P. elected its first Lieutenant Governor and its first U.S. Congressman in modern times...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The South: From Toehold to Foothold | 11/18/1966 | See Source »

Freshman rooms were usually the dirtiest in the college, even when porters vacuumed them once a week. Now that the University has eliminated this service, conditions have gone from bad to worse. Most members of the class of '70 have apparently declined the University's gracious invitation to borrow vacuuming equipment and clean their own floors. And the rooms, say the proctors sadly, are beginning to look like sties...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Debris | 10/20/1966 | See Source »

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