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

...BOLYSTON ST., Charlotte Salter is one dealer who's pleased with the profits and promise of her gallery. She and a friend, Eleanor Robbins, started the Off the Square Gallery eight years ago, exhibiting, at that time, the work of young art students. "Now," Salter confides, "the gallery has established a stable of artists." Such a metaphor makes one wonder exactly how their works could be described...

Author: By Amy Sacks, | Title: There's No Business Like . . . | 5/22/1974 | See Source »

...book, Sagan has dusted off two characters from Castle in Sweden, a play she wrote in 1963, and transported them to France. They are the twins Sebastian and Eleanor van Milhem, a leggy, radiantly idle, thoroughly decadent pair. In Scars on the Soul she permits them to coast through the usual romantic adventures, playing around with love, despair and death. From time to time, however, she interrupts the narrative with private memories and uneasy rhetorical questions. Samples: "Who reads Proust?" and "What about you, dear readers, what are your lives like...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Look, Moi, I'm Dancing | 5/20/1974 | See Source »

...woman, Eleanor White, said she felt there was "something very trivial" about Curtis's talk, and added that it left her with "a feeling that society should now concentrate on poor blacks and poor whites, and that the people in-between should be forgotten...

Author: By Richard J. Meislin, | Title: Times Editor Says She Favors Refocusing Affirmative Action | 5/16/1974 | See Source »

...alumni office in Cambridge forwards names of South African alumni to the Johannesberg club but has no jurisdiction over or involvement with the club's political and social functions, Eleanor Fitzpatrick, an administrator in the office, said yesterday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Business School Alumni Club in South Africa Gives Award to Ardent Apartheid Advocate | 5/13/1974 | See Source »

...CHARLES was stately and historic, Harvard Square was all business. In "Six O'Clock in Harvard Square," Eleanor Parker Fiske writes: "The whistles have all blown for six O'clock, and now the city timepieces begin to strike, commencing with a deep boom and running up to a high treble till the air is filled with the clashing of iron tongues... Little groups of students coming from the side streets hasten across the yard, bound for Memorial Hall, and in spite of the general din, fragments of their gay talk come clearly to the passers...

Author: By Lewis Clayton, | Title: Maybe Times Used to be Better | 4/29/1974 | See Source »

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