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

...What we are aiming toward." Newmeyer said. "is a thing where people are more into grass than alcohol. where there's more flowing speech than barking, where the atmosphere is smooth and relaxed, not sharp and biting...

Author: By Sandy Bonder, | Title: Soc Rel Grad Students Overturn Traditional Friday Cocktail Party | 11/22/1969 | See Source »

...large group of freaks huddled together for warmth. We joined them. A couple of people in our group returned from a trip to the VW with bread, cheese, and grass. Soon joints and all sorts of food-chicken, mints, cheese, peanut butter-were being passed through the crowd. We sang with Pete Seeger, we jumped for Richie Havens, we laughed at Tim Leary. A fat man frowned and a young girl took pictures while we rolled joints; everybody else smiled. Then they announced Earl Scruggs. We jumped up and began a round

Author: By Sandy Bonder, | Title: On the Far Side of the Monument | 11/20/1969 | See Source »

...road visible in the window behind him, pans across the front seat to the close-up face of his friend Octave, grimacing nervously. Renoir cuts to a distant high-angle; the car drives off the road into a ditch. Renoir cuts to a frame three-quarters filled by waving grass: it's impossible to say whether it's a low-angle shot and the characters are about to appear over its edge, or whether he's shooting a hill, or indeed where we are at all. The shooting of the sequence has broken all emotional continuity: the mood of each...

Author: By Mike Prokosch, | Title: The Moviegoer Rules of the Game | 11/20/1969 | See Source »

Kydes kept the Harvard attack moving. While almost everyone was having trouble gaining steady footing in the wet grass the short forward could not be stopped...

Author: By Martin R. Garay, | Title: Booters Edge Brown, 2-1, To Win Ivy League Title | 11/17/1969 | See Source »

...remarkable book, Soul of Wood, Jakov Lind fixed the grayed and monstrous mindscape of wartime Germany more vividly than any other writer except Günter Grass. It is surprising, therefore, to realize that Lind, who was born in Vienna and lived out the war in Holland and Germany, is not a German author at all and now does not even write in German, his first language. He is, in fact, a 42-year-old Londoner (by adoption) who writes in English. His past still troubles him so that he refuses, for instance, to read the writing of most Germans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Guilt by Disassociation | 11/14/1969 | See Source »

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