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

...Sarah Lawrence's personality remains the individual students and teachers; and in them seems to lie the real shift. For as Friedman noted, most students who come to Sarah Lawrence might just as easily have gone to Radcliffe or Barnard. More and more the Sarah Lawrence girl could pass for an "eighth sister," though not yet an identical twin...

Author: By Paul S. Cowan and L. GEOFFREY Cowan, S | Title: Expansion Threatens Sarah Lawrence Ideal | 3/9/1963 | See Source »

...aquatic misadventures, the bridegroom winds up wet and nearly naked at the desk of the hotel. The hotel manager, in sinister makeup, obviously represents Death. He has a key for the groom all right, the key he has been looking for all his life. The groom is told to lie down on a bench, and a coffin is built around him. When the manager and a lackey finish nailing it together, they carry it away, leaving the bridegroom lying dead on the bench, hands crossed on his chest. In one hand...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Menotti's Hour | 3/8/1963 | See Source »

...healthy parents and involves the metabolism of minute amounts of copper. As recently as 1960, medical textbooks stated: "The course of the disease is inexorably downhill if untreated." Most baffling is the fact that the inherited defect may either produce severe illness within the first year of life, or lie dormant like a slowly ticking time bomb for as long as 40 years. In the A.M.A. Journal last week, two New York City doctors reported that they have developed a way to detect the defect before any illness has developed, when diet and drug treatment have the best chance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Inherited Diseases: Devastating Defect | 3/8/1963 | See Source »

Today's treasurer dislikes letting even a dollar lie idle. If he raises $10 million for a new building that will go up at a rate of only $100,000 a week, for example, he invests all but what the building costs him as it goes up, earning interest on every dollar as long as he can. Some treasurers-such as those at Alcoa and Deere & Co.-have even set up their own sales financing subsidiaries to spur sales of their firm's products, and incidentally give them another profitable way to use its cash. "Every piece...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: State of Business: The Sharp-Pencil Men | 3/8/1963 | See Source »

...trouble seems to lie in Fiedler's intention of dealing with men and women "in their archetypal reality, as dreamed by our greatest writers rather than travestied by our poor selves." This Platonic ontology can be argued, but Plato himself was in no doubt that this theory was the enemy of art. Reality may be like the figures in Plato's famous cave, where only the shadows may be seen by mortal eye. But, it is just those shadows that are the substance of art, and the business of malting a play of their flickering forms is still...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Crazy Mythed-Up People | 3/8/1963 | See Source »

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