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Word: frostings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...Robert Frost '01 and John P. Marquand '15 will speak this week in Adams House and Kirkland House in their first appearances under the Ford Foundation grants to the Houses...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Frost, Marquand Visit Adams, Kirkland Houses This Week | 11/19/1957 | See Source »

...Frost will read his poetry to Adams men tonight at 8 p.m. in the dining hall. He will meet with small discussion groups in the future, although he will not be in residence at the House...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Frost, Marquand Visit Adams, Kirkland Houses This Week | 11/19/1957 | See Source »

Starting with review by the editor of Atlantic's impressive past, in which the mystical names of James Russell Lowell, Bliss Perry, Ellery Sedgwick, Thomas Bailey Aldrich, and William Dean Howells figure as editors, the issue goes on to new material by past contributors. Frost, Marquand, Hemingway, Thurber, Berenson, Morison, Isak Dinesen, President Conant, Jung, Slichter, Niebuhr, Osbert and Edith Sitwell, Auden, Wilder, McGinley, R. P. Lister, and the late Max Beerbohm march with deserved pomp and circumstance through the table of contents...

Author: By Alfred FRIENDLY Jr., | Title: The Atlantic | 11/9/1957 | See Source »

...Robert Frost intones flippantly in his latest attempt to still the clatter of the Machine Age and to put man in his proper place. Summer Slichter, not in the realm of morality, but certainly in the musty halls of tradition, takes a well-aimed iconoclastic swing at Keynesian economics. If his argument is not convincing to the conditioned minds of the New Deal, it represents a refreshing conservatism, too seldom well expounded...

Author: By Alfred FRIENDLY Jr., | Title: The Atlantic | 11/9/1957 | See Source »

...authors, however, are so novel, and in reality Slichter and Frost are reworking old themes, and doing their jobs well. Osbert Sitwell keeps up his barrage of family anecdotes; Bernard Berenson analyzes another family topic--Bernard Berenson; Beerbohm revives the Victorians; and Marquand traces his genealogy and that of New England. All is as it was--fluent, powerful in spots, and not disturbing...

Author: By Alfred FRIENDLY Jr., | Title: The Atlantic | 11/9/1957 | See Source »

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