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

Wednesday, March 27 DREAM HOUSE (ABC, 8:30-9 p.m.).*Spectator gamesmen who have become bored with all those other competitions can turn to the latest TV giveaway and watch some lucky participant win a furnished $40,000 house. A daytime version of the show will begin Monday, April 1, at 1 p.m. Premiere...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Mar. 29, 1968 | 3/29/1968 | See Source »

...Theater ceiling. If the word charismatic can describe a man talking about the art of poetry, it describes Borges delivering the Charles Eliot Norton Lectures on "this craft of verse." Borges creates a personalized version of the same subtle magic which translates the readers of his "fictions" into a dream-context without their perceiving the change...

Author: By Jack Davis, | Title: Borges Lecturing | 3/26/1968 | See Source »

...Borges, the universe is, as he said at a reading of his poetry in December, "an unstable world of the mind, an indefatigable labyrinth, a chaos, a dream." Borges sees himself, the artist, not as a searcher for the exit to the labyrinth but as a man lost along with everyone else, who can perceive and can convey to his fellows flashes of clarity within the windings of the maze. The flashes of clarity within the windings of the maze. The essence of the lectures--especially the two most recent--is the expansion of such insights...

Author: By Jack Davis, | Title: Borges Lecturing | 3/26/1968 | See Source »

Four minutes later, Harvard led by 17 points, and the dream somehow seemed possible. Bradley was throttled by the Harvard defense, and his teammates provided little visible support...

Author: By Andrew Jamison, | Title: The History Of Harvard Sports | 3/26/1968 | See Source »

Although the AFI represents a rare example of America rising to meet a crisis before it reaches insane proportions, much of an archivist's dream can no longer be made into reality: many films are permanently lost, and Hollywood's history includes stories that fill a modern-day film anthropologist with disgust. Directors rarely had the right to edit their own films, and it became common practice for studios to re-cut and mangle films they thought potentially commercial...

Author: By Tim Hunter, | Title: The Establishment of a Film Archive: Search for the Lost Films | 3/26/1968 | See Source »

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