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

...Voted, in the House and Senate Interior Committees, to spend $2,143,150 for establishing a national monument in Nebraska's agate fossil beds, named for the rich concentrations of prehistoric mammal traces that abound in the area...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Congress: Work Done | 4/16/1965 | See Source »

...minds of many, a prominent rift already exists between the rich, University-oriented parts of Cambridge and the rest of the City. If people felt that the University community was administering the poverty program, the result might be open hostility to the project--and disaster...

Author: By Robert J. Samuelson, | Title: Cambridge's War On Poverty | 4/13/1965 | See Source »

...dawn each morning last week, a procession of anxious diggers trudged five miles to the chapel in Cristalina to light a candle at the feet of St. Sebastian, praying that he would guide them to a rich strike. Many other amateurs, discouraged by the boomtown prices and the depth of the veins, were selling out. Said one: "God put the crystal near the surface, but the devil pushed it to the bottom." As the amateurs quit, professional mining outfits were moving in to buy up their claims and get down to where the devil pushed the crystal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Brazil: The Devil's Digs | 4/9/1965 | See Source »

...apocryphal Judith was a pious and beautiful Jewish widow who got the Assyrian commander Holofernes drunk in his tent, cut off his head and saved the people of Israel. Giraudoux's Judith, enchantingly played by Rosemary Harris, is a rich, pampered, articulate minx who means to sacrifice her virginity as an act of personal grandeur. The total modernity of heroine and play is that Judith is as brimful of self-consciousness as she is barren of faith. In a moment of mortal peril among enemy underlings, she calls on Holofernes, not Jehovah, to save...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Sham Saint | 4/9/1965 | See Source »

...seek new ways of earning hard currency. They hope to do so by exporting industrial products from the new enterprises built in partnership with Krupp. Ignoring politics, Krupp has pioneered West-East deals in which it provides the technological know-how and much of the machinery to labor-rich Eastern Europe, shares both the risks and profits with Communist governments. Manager Beitz predicts that in ten years Krupp's trade with Eastern Europe (only $12.5 million in 1963) will equal its sales to Germany's Common Market partners...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Germany: Krupp Looks East | 4/9/1965 | See Source »

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