Word: inhabit
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Approximately 500 dogs, 1000 monkeys, 1000 cats, and 50,000 rodents will inhabit a new $900,000 Animal Research Center to be run by the Harvard Medical School. Bernard F. Trum, lecturer on veterinary medicine in the Department of Pathology, will direct the new center...
...refugee from Greenwich Village). The focus of infection formerly was a group of improvisers called the Compass Players, celebrated for bringing forth Mike Nichols. Elaine May and Shelley Berman; currently it is a cabaret and theater called Second City (TIME, March 21, 1960). Dozens of satirical revues now inhabit the cellars of Chicago's Near North Side, but the Feiffer view of the '60s is one of the best...
Electric Shocks. There is a good deal of Jean Kerr in Mary, Mary, a play that one critic described as "five characters releasing an author." The characters inhabit an unashamedly prefabricated plot (about a divorced couple who, of course, get together again), but it is full of humor and insight. All situation comedy is clockwork; what matters is who makes the clock. Like Jean Kerr, the heroine is a compulsive wisecracker: years ago, when her husband made his first tentative pass, she told him, "Let's not start something we can't finish in a taxi on 44th Street." Like...
...Victim. And there was no sign that the U.S. would be recognized as fighting the people's cause. Of Laos' 2,000,000 inhabitants, only about half are ethnic Lao, who inhabit the fertile river valleys and the seats of government. But the tribal groups in the hills and remote jungle have never knuckled under to any central government. The Kha of the south still offer up human sacrifices at their marriage feasts, traditionally choosing as victim the grandfather of the bride...
...east are awakened by the heat and light of the sun shining through our utilitarian windows (and curtains--all the same shade of gold) at approximately the same time; those of us to the west hibernate in the afternoon because of the same windows and curtains; all of us inhabit cells which are precisely the same size, and our bathrooms are situated one under the other, layer after layer. This, I submit, is mass culture--unmitigated, a monumental exercise in poor taste...