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Word: pine (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...rival to the lackluster Lehman Hall. Nor will As You Like It supplant the once legendary University Restaurant - which a year or two back donned a toga, added a lounge, raised the prices, and drove the coffee-dawdling academics out of the building. Veteran junior faculty, though, still pine for those good old days when you could drop into University Restaurant at 11:30 a.m. and find Bailyn in one corner dazzling his listeners or Banfield in another corner infuriating his. Well, that's what they remember. That kind of intellectual give-and-take requires big round tables...

Author: By Thomas Geoghegan, | Title: The Square As You Like It | 12/8/1970 | See Source »

...need a lot of leadership from our lettermen. B.U. will be higher than a Georgia pine for this game, and we can't afford to be looking past this one [to Saturday's Ivy opener against Dartmouth]." head coach Bob Harrison said yesterday...

Author: By Jonathan P. Carlson, | Title: Improved Crimson Will Face B.U. In Beanpot Basketball Tournament | 12/1/1970 | See Source »

...did?to the extent of an Army captain named Clyde W. Jennings of Lynchburg, Va., a handbag salesman in civilian life. Arie Beall gave them a big bang-up wedding in Pine Bluff, and they settled down in New York City's Forest Hills, known Before Martha as the site of the national tennis championship matches. But Clyde was on the road a good deal, the marriage failed, and they were divorced after eleven years. Their one child, Jay, is now a 23-year-old second lieutenant in the Tank Corps...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Martha Mitchell's View From The Top | 11/30/1970 | See Source »

Fabulous it may be, but it is tough, too ?transient and lonely. Martha Mitchell, whose husband often works 15 hours a day, knows the loneliness well, and sometimes the ruthless power city overwhelms the happy kid from Pine Bluff. "A lot of this takes a great deal out of me," she said recently, and these lonely low points are likely to generate some late-hour phone calls to friends, which the public never hears about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Martha Mitchell's View From The Top | 11/30/1970 | See Source »

...Russia, a huge chemical plant was built right beside a beloved tourist attraction: Yasnaya Polyana, Leo Tolstoy's gracious country estate. Unmonitored fumes are poisoning Tolstoy's forests of oak and pine, and powerless conservationists can only wince. With equal indifference, the Soviet pulp and paper industry has settled on the shores of Lake Baikal. No matter how fully the effluents are treated, they still defile the world's purest waters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: Communist Pollution | 11/30/1970 | See Source »

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