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Word: greyingly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Another reason for the new interest in owning pets appears to be the old atmosphere of the city, especially in Harvard housing with its sealed-off living units. I remember walking up the four flights of Thayer Middle in September 1967, and seeing these four grey, automatically-closing doors on each floor. In this situation, you've got to import as much life into your room as possible, and a pet is perhaps the best way. "It's more human," one student said when asked why he kept...

Author: By Bennett H. Beach, | Title: We're Coming to Take You Away, Ha Ha | 2/9/1971 | See Source »

...like a tiny emission of life from the obscurity of the set, which was designed by Franco Colavecchia. He was more concerned to build something that would hold the lights than to design a work of art, but it is no accident that the backdrop is grey and not pink. A bare stage for a bare world...

Author: By Esther Dyson, | Title: Homage to Beckett Theatre | 1/25/1971 | See Source »

This was, "after all, Mr. Bok's press conference," as Dillon said in his introduction, and Francis (Hooks) Burr laid one grey-striped pants leg across the other, folded his hands, bobbed his free foot lightly, and watched. To some of Bok's responses he nodded his assent...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Francis Burr: the Man Who Selected the Man | 1/12/1971 | See Source »

Senior Yearbooks from the early days of the Pusey era frequently contain pictures of the new president, his hair not yet grey, and often wearing a casual looking sweater under his tweed jacket, sipping sherry with undergraduates. In those days, he was still the hero of American academics, the man who had fought the right wing demon and defeated him. The Faculty of Arts and Sciences commended him in an unusual resolution, and he was featured on an Omnibus program. His door was still open to the press, which heaped him with praise...

Author: By Michael Ryan, | Title: The Pusey Years: Through Change and Storm | 1/12/1971 | See Source »

...Dead; David Nelson, a short, blonde-whiskered man, stood stage-front with his guitar; Marmaduke played along and sang, and Jerry Garcia sat at the side playing the pedal-steel guitar. This was Nelson's band, the New Riders of the Purple Sage ( named for a Zane Grey novel ), a Western-Rock hybrid band that is a sideline for Garcia and one of the Dead's sub-groups. Before the Riders could start a second song, the fire doors at the back of the stage were forced open by a crowd of ticketless Dead seekers who had broken past...

Author: By William S. Beckett, | Title: Come Hear Uncle John's Band . . . | 1/7/1971 | See Source »

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