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

McCandlish had gotten to within one out of ending a three-hit game, when two singles and a double brought about his downfall in the ninth. Penn had tied the score at 4-all before Bob Lincoin came in to put out the fire and the game went into extra innings...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Nine Nips Penn in Tenth Inning, 5-4 | 4/24/1967 | See Source »

Some educators criticize what Lincoin Moses, 44, the chairman of Stanford's statistics department, describes as "excessive airfreighting of expensive minds." Moses, although he is a member of United Air Lines' 100,000-Mile Club, thinks many meetings could just as well take place with telephone conference calls. Among those who share his complaint is Zoologist Charles J. Flora, 37, of Western Washington State College, who looks on traveling to conferences as at best an unavoidable bore and at worst a deadly ritual. "You get to the point, so enervated with endless waiting and the cramped discomfort...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Professors: Where They Have Gone | 8/5/1966 | See Source »

...sixth, as untidily as always. Naye blooped a single into right, and Grate booted Spaeth's hard grounder at shortstop to put men on first and second. Bill Dukiet hit a hopper to Jim Tobin at third that took a crazy bounce for an infield hit, loading the bases. Lincoin fanned the next man, but Bill Sorenson's single to right scored two runs...

Author: By Lee H. Simowitz, | Title: Scrambling Navy Nine Hands Crimson 5-3 Loss | 4/18/1966 | See Source »

...Lincoin, who gave up only one hit over the first five innings, took the loss for the Crimson. Rick Buchanan, who relieved Rick Miller in the sixth for Navy, stopped Harvard on one hit for the rest...

Author: By Lee H. Simowitz, | Title: Scrambling Navy Nine Hands Crimson 5-3 Loss | 4/18/1966 | See Source »

...magazine that simply couldn't decide whether it wanted to be a liberal government's House-organ or a conservative administration's shrill and ineffectual opponent. There's a fine chapter on Colonel House himself, the intellectual pimp of Wilsonian progressivism, and his relations with the journalist Lincoln Colcord. Lincoin Steffens is taken to pieces for walking into his "scientific" study of corruption with pretty clear notions of what he was going to find, then kindly put back together again for the, "humility" he apparently evinced at the end of his life after his conversion to Communism. It might...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Family Portrait | 8/16/1965 | See Source »

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