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

...statistics can't tell the story. Much depends on how individual decisions are made and then implemented--the disposition of the city dump land, for example, could have a lasting impact on Cambridge's politics. It is already clear that the formal and informal role sof the universities are growing larger, if for no other reasons than the rise in the number of employees they hire and the number of students and faculty members they bring to the city. With the NASA complex and the Kennedy Library, are these roles bound to grow even larger...

Author: By Robert J. Samuelson, | Title: CAMBRIDGE IN FLUX | 6/15/1967 | See Source »

...Garson also draws on Othello for bits of martial brouhaha and on Richard II for the pervasive vegetable metaphor that crops up in MacBird's first press conference ("This land will be a garden carefully pruned; / We'll lop off any branch that looks too tall / That seems to grow too lofty or too fast") and in the spectacle of a mad Lady MacBird sweetening the land with bouquets and aerosol deodorant. To assert that MacBird rapes the old Swan with no intelligence and no compassion is evidently to miss the point, for Miss Garson makes no claims...

Author: By Stuart A. Davis, AT THE CHARLES PLAYHOUSE INDEFINITELY | Title: Mac Bird | 6/14/1967 | See Source »

Unless the American weightmen grow homesick or the sprinters get cold feet, Harvard-Yale should win by a margin of at least 13-5. Harvard-Yale Squad 100: Andersen (H), Robinson (Y) 220: Young (Y), Jewett (H) 440: Young (Y), Hobbs (Y) 880: Colburn (H), Burns (H) Mile: Shaw (H), Bittner (Y) 2-Mile: Baker (H), Mardin (H) 120 Hurdles: Moore (Y), Evans (Y) 440 Hurdles: Haggerty (H), Rony (Y) Shot Put: Greenlee (Y), Benka (H) Discus: Redendal (H), Wilson (H) Javelin: Berson (H), Champi (H) Hammer: Wilson (H), Ajootian (H) Pole Vault: Schoonover (H), Brady (Y) High Jump: Evans...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard-Yale Track Team Faces Oxford-Cambridge Today | 6/13/1967 | See Source »

...importance of taking time under the circumstances provided by the Institute to get away from the rat race and get your batteries recharged. To expose yourself voluntarily to new points of view and new problems. To let your mind run free, and find your ideas, your perceptions, change and grow in this atmosphere, liberated from the debilating day-by-day demands of an operational job. The opportunity for this kind of rejuvenation, unshackling, could be worth the year all by itself...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Kennedy Institute is a Haven for 'In-and-Outers,' Men Who Move Betwixt Government and Academia | 6/12/1967 | See Source »

Through Interpol, police the world over can trace a Bombay jewel thief with a dozen aliases and passports, study the latest research on police use of helicopters, learn how Lebanon is persuading farmers to grow sunflowers instead of hashish-or call on the FBI's monumental files of 184 million fingerprints. By holding annual conventions on a different continent each year, Interpol unites the world's fuzz-Tokyo detectives, Canadian mounties, U.S. narcotics agents-for mutual education in everything from electronics to odonto-grams (tooth identification). In addition, Interpol organizes regular seminars on scientific crime detection, sends forgery...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Police: Global Beat | 6/9/1967 | See Source »

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