Word: feds
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...voyagers in the wasteland," said Gardner of the new enterprise. "We're fed up with present television, and we're planning entertainment which is profound as well as good...
...term) or if his qualifications are unlikely to recommend him to a more selective school. However, the lack of selectivity which is decreed by the State imposes a serious burden on the University. Each year hundreds of students with infinitesimal academic capabilities must be admitted, housed, fed and seated in classrooms. And, unless standards are to be thoroughly profaned, after a semester or two they must be flunked out. The proponents of this trial-by-fire policy argue that no admissions system is perfect and, therefore, that everyone, particularly at a state university, should have the chance to prove himself...
...test his hypothesis on the Epistles, Morton started with the assumption that Paul was indeed the author of Galatians (an attribution no scholar questions), fed every sentence in the Epistles to the computer for kai counting. Morton's conclusion: "There are four Epistles which were written by a man whose vocabulary had a constant proportion of kais in it, who used his kais in a consistent pattern and who, by definition, must be the Apostle Paul. The other ten Epistles exhibit diverse characteristics and must have come from at least three other hands...
Soviet scientists have not yet taught shrimps to whistle, but Radio Moscow last week reported an even more fantastic feat. Geologists in northern Siberia, it recounted breathlessly, dug up a pair of salamanders that had been frozen for 5,000 years, thawed them out and fed them berries and mosquitoes from their hands. One of the prehistoric newts (tritons) scampered happily about for three weeks before it died; it was then bottled and sent to a Moscow University laboratory. Its comrade lived for several months in a museum...
...puck." Pilous' approach has helped Left Wing Bobby Hull, 24, become one of the most explosive scorers in hockey history, with a record-tying 50 goals last year. Hull got off to a slow start this year, but at the halfway mark he found the range. Fed by his linemates, Right Wing Murray Balfour and Center "Red" Hay, he has scored 18 goals in his last 14 games, last week turned his second "hat trick" of the season with his 26th, 27th and 28th goals against the Boston Bruins. "I'm not ashamed to admit it," says Hull...