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Word: marigold (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...Marley gives substance to the detractors of B.F. Skinner, who say that there would be no art, no beauty in his perfectly conditioned world. Marley does indeed fit the trite metaphor describing how the beautiful marigold grows out of a heap of cow dung. Marley is one of the finest songwriters-singers-musicians alive today, even if he believes that deceased Ethiopian head-of-state Haile Selassie...

Author: By J. WYATT Emmerich, | Title: Bob Marley: The Rasta Wizard Puts on Ivy | 7/20/1979 | See Source »

...Perdue. Last week, when many chickens were selling for 49? per Ib. in New York-area supermarkets, Perdue broilers fetched 77? per Ib. Frank Perdue, of course, would claim that the premium is justified by the large and juicy breasts of his yellow-skinned chickens (he feeds them marigold petals), but clearly, something is also due to the appeal of his image...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FOOD: Not Just Chicken Feed | 9/6/1976 | See Source »

Some problems-unlike the squaring of the circle or the conversion of the Chinese-do have a solution. So David Burpee, 82, has finally discovered. All his life, Burpee has been devoted to the task of making a better marigold. As chief of the W. Atlee Burpee mail-order seed company from 1915 to 1970, Burpee found ways to invent new varieties large and small, but his main quest was for a pure white marigold, one that could be cross-pollinated with existing yellow, orange, and rust varieties to create a rainbow of new colors. In 1954, Burpee made...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Mrs. Vonk's Victory | 9/8/1975 | See Source »

Then, last year, Alice Vonk, now 67, a widowed mother of eight from Sully, Iowa, sent in some seeds to Burpee's farm in California. The first crop of marigolds was not quite white, but its seeds were planted this year, yielding at last the winner. Mrs. Vonk, who picked up her check last week at Burpee's home in Doylestown, Pa., did it all without any highfalutin horticultural techniques. Every summer for the past 20 years, she simply picked out the flowers that came closest to the ideal and saved their seeds for replanting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Mrs. Vonk's Victory | 9/8/1975 | See Source »

Doddering Prey. With extraordinary skill, Amis manages to have fun with such things as Marigold's fear of losing her memory, Zeyer's stroke-induced nominal aphasia. (Nouns escape him and periphrasis ensues, with a passport, for example, becoming "the thing you have to show when you leave a country.") Even Shorty's interior dialogues with his own bowels are put to comic use, along with the fact that old people are often mean and silly, and fall down easily. Amis pursues his doddering prey with tiny twists of plot: through the use of stink bombs, squirt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Geriatricks | 9/30/1974 | See Source »

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