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Word: piped (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Usage:

...bomb, which exploded in the lesk drawer of U. S. Army Col. Donald Bletz, a fellow of the CFIA, at 1:02 a. m. yesterday morning, was apparently encased in a length of steel pipe, Capt. Leo Doyle of the State Fire Marshal's office, said yesterday...

Author: By Garrett Epps and Samuel Z. Goldhaber, S | Title: Police Seek Two Suspects In Explosion at the CFIA | 10/15/1970 | See Source »

...road toward the town, dropping the large pendulum clock that he meant to save. "I fell down," Greene remembers. "I had a flashlight, but I still couldn't see a thing. Sparks were falling all around me. I got lost in the chaparral. Finally I found a water pipe and followed it down...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: California: Ordeal by Fire Storm | 10/12/1970 | See Source »

...Yemen shortly after the Suez War, I heard a black dock porter reciting an epic poem to a group who lounged in the cafe smoking the hubble-bubble pipe and chewing qat (a mildly narcotic green leaf). Normally, he would have chanted verses about heroes of the past. On this occasion his epic hero was a man named Nasser, who stood on the beaches of Port Said and picked up the British tanks and the French planes and hurled them back into the sea. For him, for other black and brown and yellow men, and wherever the cry "Allahu akbar...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: From Country Boy to Epic Hero | 10/12/1970 | See Source »

...class, desiring more stimulation than that provided by pipe-sucking Deans or publishing executives who sang praise to themselves, staged our own rebellion. As good revolutionaries should, we built on the smaller gains of our predecessors: thus the Nieman Foundation bore the expense of our underground seminars, even if or Curator continued to find reasons excluding his personal attendance...

Author: By Larry L. king, | Title: Mailer and Styron at Harvard | 10/2/1970 | See Source »

...make such a desert bloom, the Columbia scientists are creating some upwelling of their own-in miniature. Dropping a 3½ plastic pipe off the northern coast of St. Croix, where the Caribbean slopes off very steeply, they are siphoning up nutrient-rich, cold (41° F.) sea water from a depth of half a mile and feeding it into small pools, each with a capacity of 16,000 gallons. Within ten days the pools teem with phytoplankton and become ideal breeding grounds for aquatic life. Last week the Columbia scientists "set" their first batch of young Chesapeake...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Aquaculture: Food from the Deep | 8/31/1970 | See Source »

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