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

...number 71 was walking down the street near Adams House with a bottle of Chianti. He approached a total stranger- a number 89, it later developed- and said "seventy...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: And at Harvard | 12/2/1969 | See Source »

...hard about what he's got to say; enjoy the images he puts you on to, and the pictures that get conjured up in your head. You'll like it a lot more that way, and the message, with the inevitability of Ishmael Reed's hangover, will come later...

Author: By Lynn M. Darling, | Title: From the Shelf Yellow Back Radio Broke-Down | 12/2/1969 | See Source »

...Education will consider tomorrow a recommendation made by a student-faculty Ed. School committee that Harvard not even consider joining the Cambridge Project policy board unless certain specified changes are made in the Project. The Ed School faculty will make its own recommendation on the Project to Pusey later this month...

Author: By Jeff Magalif, | Title: Policy Committee Reaches Decision On Project Cam | 12/2/1969 | See Source »

There is little agreement on the best way to restructure local government, and Moynihan vacillates accordingly. The metropolitan sprawl, he recognizes, has made it "difficult to collect power in one place." This leads him at first to espouse annexing the suburbs. Later on, he opts for community control and decentralization. Soon he is also stressing the responsibility of the states, and, in a final dizzy burst, ends up praising the sensibleness of county government. Instead of conserving political energies, Moynihan seems to suggest that reformers pursue all these goals simultaneously...

Author: By Thomas Geoghegan, | Title: The City Moynihanism | 12/2/1969 | See Source »

...days later, Galway Kinnell appeared and read in Boylston Auditorium, and for me, it was like sunrise in a misty eastern sky... Suddenly schools of poetry and communities of like-minded poets seemed obsolete; idealism and purity reigned again. Kinnell read from an inexhaustible richness of things both everyday and vast, from the flesh and bones and stones of the woods and its parts. He read about the mountains in Vermont and I thought of Frost: he read about things growing and I thought of Rocthke; he read about the creative necessity of solitude and I thought...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Poetry For Galway Kinnell: Confessions, A Blessing | 12/1/1969 | See Source »

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