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Word: doped (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...nice to really free Bobby and Erika. Music sun and dope for about an hour. People are really digging it. A two-year-old child tries to investigate the psychedelic bus behind the platform, but can't get in. He comes back crying to his mother. She comforts him. "They won't let you in? Those mother fuckers. You just go on up and tell them to fuck off. Don't let them give you no shit." She takes him over to the bus and he gets a guided tour...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Way It Was The Second Time Around | 11/12/1970 | See Source »

...times, Vellucci's ideas have more shades of ultra-conservatism than of humor. This Fall, he proposed that Cambridge pay $10,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of major drug suppliers and $1000 for similar dope on street pushers. "We're going back to the early 1800's, when bounties were placed on people breaking the law," he declared at a press conference. "We're going to create an army of bounty hunters." Less well known is the fact that when the bill was first brought before the Council for discussion, Vellucci himself referred it to committee...

Author: By Samuel Z. Goldhaber, | Title: Profile The People's Mayor | 11/5/1970 | See Source »

...wanted to be men. They wanted to be the cultural heroes and wanted to continue the sexual revolution which meant impersonal, free access to women. They wanted to hold the dope and dole it out to their women, keeping the much-too-heavy drugs for themselves. At TDA, women running the demonstration asked everyone not to trash. Some men retorted, "No mother-fuckin" woman is going to tell us when we can trash or not." So they threw the bricks and scurried back to protect their women. But women's affinity groups didn't need protection, or the shit which...

Author: By Marvin S. Swartz, | Title: The Movement The Bemused Left | 10/31/1970 | See Source »

...something practical?' " College was out. Scholarships were unheard of in Kemp's world; his parents were separated and his mother, a garment worker, earned hardly enough to feed the family. At 15, he dropped out of high school-bored, seeing no future, Kemp hustled numbers and ran dope. Later, he enlisted in the Air Force and became a communications specialist. When he got out, the personnel offices at the New York airports had nothing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Harlem to Harvard | 10/19/1970 | See Source »

Well, what went wrong was that he was the smartest kid in his high school class, won a scholarship to B.U., and turned on to Marx, dope, and sex in his freshman, sophomore and junior years, in that order. In his senior year, he edited the B.U. News and transformed it into a real radical rag, printing the kind of stories LNS would later specialize in. His account of those years is refreshingly ironic- a welcome relief from those numerous tomes gravely relating the intricate workings of local politicos-but it unfortunately omits some events we would like to hear...

Author: By Mark H. Odonoghue, | Title: From the Farm Good Riddance To the Sixties | 10/9/1970 | See Source »

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