Word: ol
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Oklahoma Christian's students, many of them products of Oklahoma City's public schools, do not, as yet, find the process boring, and joke that after they graduate they may go back and throw their arms gratefully around that lil ol computer. Whether a professor is really as palatable out of a can as when swallowed live is of interest to those concerned with the growing teacher shortage. To find out, the U.S. Office of Education is spending $70,000 on a two-year evaluation of electronic teaching at Oklahoma Christian...
...However, while I can assure you that small is the number of 'Cliffies who lament through cruel, sleepless nights their debarment from the untold wonders of ol' Lamont, many are they who have gnashed their teeth in furious despair that of the two existing copies of a desired book, one was, as is wonted, mysteriously missing from the Widener stacks, and the other was cackling demonically from the hallowed shelves of Lamont Library...
...beach on many a hot August noon. The bullfight season, which for a century ended in October, now unofficially extends throughout the year on the mild south coast, and in any season, in any city, there are likely to be as many tourists as Spaniards shouting the ol...
...confusion about Rockwell Manufacturing Co. and Rockwell-Standard Corp. They are completely separate companies, making different products, although the same Rockwell family is connected with both. We were, shall we say, discouraged on reading in TIME [May 28 that "Willard [Rockwell] Jr., 51, was named president and chief executive ol Pittsburgh's Rockwell Manufacturing Co. last month." The fact is that Willard F. Rockwell Jr. was president of Rockwell Manufacturing Co. for 17 years-from 1947 to 1964. In 1963, he was named president of Rockwell-Standard Corp., a post that he held for over a year simultaneously with...
Another expression of man's sinfulness is the inability of Schulz's characters to change for the better: fuss-budgety Lucy is destined to grow from "the crabby little girl of today" to "the crabby old woman of tomorrow"; "good ol' wishy-washy" Charlie Brown will be forever friendless, always the losing pitcher in 184-to-O baseball games. Trapped by what Cardinal Newman called "some terrible aboriginal calamity," Schulz's characters never seem able to keep up with the world. As Linus puts it: "How can you do 'new math' problems with...