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

Harvard wasted little time in the sudden-death period. Ware took two shots and Charlie Scammon got off a pair which Leu stopped. Then Garrity drilled a neat pass to Murphy at the right corner of the crease. Leu went for Murphy, but the puck went to Smith at the other corner. With the whole net to shoot at from three feet, Smith easily sent the weary skaters to the showers...

Author: By Robert P. Marshall jr., | Title: Crimson Sextet Edges NU But Bows to BU, Cornell | 1/5/1967 | See Source »

...lamps with deliriously screaming people roars through London town. Painted and caparisoned in madcap masquerade, they leap down from their green go-devil and race through startled crowds like advance men for oncoming chaos. They crash into pedestrians, jostle a Guardsman on sentry duty, all but knock down a pair of passing nuns. Finally, they gang up on a baby-faced brat (David Hemmings) in a convertible Rolls, a mod bod with a pop mop who has plainly gained the whole world without losing his cool. He flips the revelers a fiver and then Rolls away as the camera follows...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The Things Which Are Not Seen | 12/30/1966 | See Source »

...Star-Spangled Girl. Eden without Eve is Neil Simon's idea of Paradise. The eternal female drives his characters nuts. In The Odd Couple, a pair of poker-playing middle-agers fled their wives to room together in bachelor bliss. In The Star-Spangled Girl, a pair of post-Ivy League rebels share a dropout of an apartment with penurious satisfaction until a girl who looks like a whipped-cream frappé shows up to curdle their...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Simple Simon | 12/30/1966 | See Source »

...maybe a pair of antlers. Could any one mistake a 13-year-old boy, dressed in a red hat and red jacket and driving a blue and white snowmobile, for a deer? A Minnesota hunter did just that last month and shot the boy dead. In Maine, Edwin Horr, 60, was sitting on a rock, smoking, when he was shot - in the right knee, left calf and left thigh - by a myopic marksman who thought that the smoke of Horr's cigarette was the rump of a white-tailed buck...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hunting: The Blood Sport | 12/30/1966 | See Source »

Raymond Moley's star faded more than a generation ago, after briefly generating power and light for the U.S. President he served. He and Franklin Roosevelt made a curious, and before long incompatible, pair: the brilliant Columbia University professor on whose counsel F.D.R. placed the highest value at first, and the headstrong political pragmatist who eventually came to count few men's counsel above his own. For Moley, disillusion set in soon. He left Washington in September 1933, after only six months as presidential assistant, emissary and speech collaborator. In this book, he builds a private monument over...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Living in the Past | 12/30/1966 | See Source »

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