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

Only 900 fans braved the sleet, slush, and cold to see Sanders' first home win, but those that did were treated to sound fundamental basketball...

Author: By Jefferson M. Flanders, | Title: Harvard Cagers Stun Bruins in IAB Upset, 78-63 | 12/17/1973 | See Source »

...returning to the university, he heard footsteps behind him, then felt the slush of paint dripping down his face. "What is important," said Koenigs, "is not that a fellow had a bucket of paint dumped on his head but that the university is out of bounds to the authority of this democratic state. The radicals are exercising all power, and it is dangerous to all of us when they can trample on anyone they want and nothing happens...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The Professor Protests | 7/30/1973 | See Source »

...truly insidious mentality thriving in the Mass Hall gang. Witness the following conversation held at Monday's encounter: "Mr. Steiner, where did the money come from for the roses?" "Those things have a way of taking care of themselves." What this reveals about the Bok Administration is that a slush fund exists, guised in the legitimacy of the Harvard budget, for the continuation of Harvard's male chauvinist tradition. We condemn the existence of this alleged fund and demand that the Jox eliminate it immediately...

Author: By Peter A. Landry, | Title: Petering Out | 6/1/1973 | See Source »

...role of the Jester, playing the Fool, is astonishingly effective and almost beautiful. But like so much else about this novel, even this is belated. Revelations in a puddle on the very last page don't exactly compensate for the foregoing wade through 400 pages of ankle-deep slush...

Author: By Alice C. Van buren, | Title: Remembrance of Things Better Forgotten | 4/9/1973 | See Source »

...recorder virtuoso Frans Brueggen tells his Harvard music seminar, the only workable solution to these difficulties is: go Baroque. Abandon your arid twentieth-century musicology as well as your heroic nineteenth-century slush, and look upon this music with the relative simplicity of a Baroque composer-performer. Obviously easier said than done; but Monday evening both Brueggen and eminent harpsichordist Gustav Leonhardt succeeded admirably in this life-giving approach to the music of a lost tradition...

Author: By Stephen E. Hefling, | Title: Going Baroque | 11/3/1972 | See Source »

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