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

Most fruit drinks served here use sugar as a sweetener, but some flavors, such as lemon-lime, were available only with a cyclamte base, C. Graham Hurlbut, director of the Food Services Department, said yesterday. He added that cyclamates had been used at Harvard in no foods except the fruit punch...

Author: By Mark W. Oberle, | Title: Harvard Dining Halls End Use of Cyclamates Today | 10/28/1969 | See Source »

...Lime...

Author: By Faye Levine, | Title: Peach, Chocolate, and Lime The Three Famous Flavors of Radcliffe | 9/18/1969 | See Source »

...both of these flavors are unsuitable, a girl can still do Radcliffe in lime. For this it is most useful to have been brought up in a family which is professionally intellectual: usually college professors, artists, or writers. It helps to have gone to one of the progressive private schools, where standards are predominantly individualistic and intellectual, rather than social. (With girls' schools these are more easily distinguished than with boys.) And it is useful to have lived in a college town, a foreign country, or a sophisticated urban community; to have applied to a very small number of progressive...

Author: By Faye Levine, | Title: Peach, Chocolate, and Lime The Three Famous Flavors of Radcliffe | 9/18/1969 | See Source »

Like the chocolates, this flavor wanted to liberalize the sign-out rules but while the chocolate reason was an indignant "We are responsible enough," the lime reason was "They have no business interfering with our lives...

Author: By Faye Levine, | Title: Peach, Chocolate, and Lime The Three Famous Flavors of Radcliffe | 9/18/1969 | See Source »

...control the crown-of-thorns, some scientists suggest repopulating the reefs with tritons, which are now protected by law in Queensland, Australia. Others propose spreading lime on the ocean floor, a technique that has already been used with moderate success to protect Long Island Sound's oyster beds from the common American starfish, Asterias forbesi. A Japanese scientist has even advised stringing wire around coral reefs to repel the starfish with a low-voltage electric shock...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Marine Biology: Plague in the Sea | 9/12/1969 | See Source »

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