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

...idea arose as an answer to charges that demonstrators are 'effete snobs' who can go out and demonstrate but not do anything tangible." Jeffrey Nims '71, a director of the drive, said...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Anti-War Group Supports HUC-Backed Blood Drive | 11/25/1969 | See Source »

Some of the credit for the dry field must go to the Harvard soccer managers who roiled a tarp over the goal areas Sunday night when it started to drizzle. Walt Tomford '70 and Jim Law '72 pushed the large tarp over the field, a job usually requiring ten men. "It was a hefty job, and I felt pretty good until this morning when my groin muscles really hurt," Tomford said...

Author: By Martin R. Garay, | Title: Booters Beat Brown, 4-0; Enter NCAA Quarterfinals | 11/25/1969 | See Source »

Coach Bill McCurdy is cautions but optimistic about his team, which also includes Mike Koerner, John Heyburn, Erik Roth, and Howie Foye. "We're not going to be in there for exercise." he said. Thursday. "We'll be a better team than we were in the IC4A's, but everything must go right...

Author: By (special TO The crimson), | Title: Harriers Hope to Improve In Rematch With Villanova | 11/24/1969 | See Source »

...Aldwych is one of the harder theatres in London to get to: if you go by underground, you get off at Holborn and walk a very long block down to the Stand. This is its only disadvantage, however, and counterbalancing that is one overpowering merit: the Aldwych is the London home of the Royal Shakespeare Company. Perhaps the most salient comment about this group is expressed on the back of every RSC program: "The company is responsible for most of the major Shakespeare productions seen in this country." And one might add, most of the major Shakespeare productions seen...

Author: By Frederic C. Bartter jr., | Title: Shakespeare and the RSC | 11/24/1969 | See Source »

...that MOST OF THE POETRY PUBLISHED NOW-A-DAYS IS OLD FASHIONED. The Advocate vacillated between innovation and a nervous caution. A reaction in the fifties against the poetic domination of Eliot was expressed by Peter Viereck in a parody of Prufrock: "Today the women come and go Talking of T.S. Eliot." Jonathan Culler, in his introduction to the Centennial Anthology, described a magazine that had "stayed Georgian ten years too late during the poetic ferment of the twenties"; the poets who found themselves at Harvard after the close of World War II, nearly thirty years later, had no patience...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Advocate Rumors of Grandeur | 11/24/1969 | See Source »

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