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

...comes to the America he wants, Berrigan sidles into a vision of "Paradise Park"-a Utopia straight out of the pixiest moments of The Greening of America: "Let the people enter, grow, run, fly, perambulate, consume, pull corks from, spread jams and peanut butter on, swim and sun in, et cetera, as the day is long...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Minotaur or Man? | 6/14/1971 | See Source »

...article last week in Turf World, Antony Parisella, director of mutuels at Belmont Park. said, "The difference between the ordinary bettor and a top gambler like Jules Fink or Larry Darby or S?m Lewin is that when they (Darby et. al.) lose they lose in small handfuls, but when they win they take the money away in wheelbarrows. The ordinary bettor just does not know...

Author: By James Nagrom, | Title: Harvard Gambler Attacks Belmont Stakes | 6/4/1971 | See Source »

...instead of the customary "Bonjour." The newspaper France-Soir ran a headline that was almost English: POMPIDOU-HEATH SMILING DAY. Heath, similarly, spoke in a language that was almost French when he arrived at Orly. London's Evening Standard slipped in a small tribute with the headline TED ET GEORGES: SUNSHINE FINALE. Meanwhile, at a blacktie dinner at the Elysée the first night, Pompidou toasted the Queen with a superb Dom Pérignon '64 champagne and noted: "Our views are sufficiently close that we may continue without pessimism...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Europe: The British Are Coming!?* | 5/31/1971 | See Source »

Harvard College at its inception was committed to the principle. "Veritas, Christo, et Ecclesiae" -Truth, Christ, and the Church. In the 20th century, Harvard's commitment was reduced to merely "Veritas." If we dispense with academic freedom in Harvard College in 1971, why don't we also, to be honest, also dispense with "Veritas...

Author: By John C. Webb, | Title: The Mail TWO AND TWO TOGETHER | 4/30/1971 | See Source »

...this pictures poses no political threat to anybody's system. Jean-Luc Godard recently said: "If movie makers were building airplanes, there would be an accident every time one took off. But in the movies, these accidents are called Oscars." Instead of meditating/postulating/lauding on the Artist's manifold intentions, et cetera, since his rudimentary competence is now established, perhaps we should ask the larger question about why such films are so highly rewarded, about what they are built-objectively designed-to do. To go someplace? Or simply to parade prettily around the runway...

Author: By Jim Crawford, | Title: Exploitation Movies Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion | 4/23/1971 | See Source »

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