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

...otherwise strong Harvard team some problems in the regular season, which begins next Saturday against Princeton in the Stadium ("weather and the drainage in the Stadium permitting," adds McCurdy). Bailee Reed, who will be running in the 440 and mile relays on Saturday, is the Crimson's only proven sprinter...

Author: By E.j. Dionne, | Title: Freshman Faces Decathlon As Thinclads Run, Jump | 4/13/1973 | See Source »

Still, other points in her growing story, especially her allegations concerning the Central Intelligence Agency, remain to be proven. She said two CIA men, including Herman A. Mountain, chairman of the agency's Cambridge Bureau, paid her $350 for telephone expenses at a March 3, 1972, rendezvous in North Conway...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Jessie Gill's Story: Is It Fact or Fancy? | 4/12/1973 | See Source »

Recent events at the University of Massachusetts have proven him a valuable prophet. The decision at UMass last week to hire Bowles, Herbert M. Gintis and two other radical economists, leaves Harvard with only one lonely radical economist, who is skeptical of what one pioneer can do on a deserted frontier...

Author: By Fran Schumer, | Title: A Peepshow of the Economics Department | 4/10/1973 | See Source »

MANY PROFESSORS in the Economics Department, embittered over their relations with students during the Harvard strikes, relegate student opinion in hiring decisions to the dustbin. They regard academic policy as a cloistered affair, only privy to those who have proven their credentials strong enough to deal with X-rated matters. If education and decisions concerning education are no matter for public speculation, then it would seem that Harvard faculty members would regard their own work in this same light. This attitude would logically keep professors from mixing business with academic research and would relegate consulting work to the dustbin, where...

Author: By Fran Schumer, | Title: A Peepshow of the Economics Department | 4/10/1973 | See Source »

...approved of it. In the face of such charges, Republican Congressmen as well as many G.O.P. stalwarts in all walks of life were highly critical of Nixon's decision merely to authorize curt denials through White House spokesmen rather than speak openly and fully. Besides the single court-proven act of spying at the Watergate, there are now broader charges of a covert and systematic attempt by Nixon's re-election officials to disrupt the campaigns of potential Democratic opponents in last year's presidential election...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INVESTIGATIONS: Republican Revolt Over Watergate | 4/9/1973 | See Source »

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