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Word: sore (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

Sophomore goalie Dick Locksley, who was expected to be back last week, still has a very sore shoulder and probably won't be ready for the Brown contest. Ivy Soccer Standings W L T Brown 4 0 1 Penn 3 0 2 Harvard 3 1 1 Cornell 3 1 1 Yale 2 2 1 Princeton 1 4 0 Columbia 0 4 1 Dartmouth...

Author: By Andrew Jamison, | Title: Booters Hoping For Upset Win Against Brown | 11/15/1967 | See Source »

...prophesy and say, Thus saith the Lord; Say, a sword, a sword is sharpened, and also furbished: it is sharpened to make a sore slaughter ... Slay utterly old and young, both maids and little children, and women...

Author: By Boisfeuillet JONES Jr., | Title: The Outrage of Benevolent Paternalism | 10/13/1967 | See Source »

...Boston manager, to turn these poten- tially good players into a cohesive unit. Boston has long had the reputation as an undisciplined, live-it-up team, and has been a graveyard for managers. When Williams came onto the scene, he laid down the law: no overweight players, no sore-armed pitchers, no lazy self-centered attitudes. He showed he meant business by benching his good players when they started to lapse back into their old habits...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: However Did the Red Sox Do It? | 10/5/1967 | See Source »

...grim irony that Viet Nam's bloodiest battleground should be called the Demilitarized Zone. The DMZ, established in 1954 to keep peace between the two Viet Nams, is a running sore. Across its six-mile width come Northern Communist troops to strike and then scuttle back over a frontier that U.S. fighting men are forbidden to cross. Other battalions slither between Marine outposts to attack from the rear, undermining Saigon's rule in its northernmost provinces...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Alarm Belt | 9/15/1967 | See Source »

Ridiculous Ruse. This time, Voznesensky is sore at the Union of Writers, the party's all-powerful cultural arm that oversees literary activities in the Soviet Union. It was bad enough that the union turned thumbs down on the invitation he had received to give a poetry reading at the Lincoln Center Summer Festival in Manhattan last June, but the style of the denial, he said, was insufferable. It was not until four days before his departure that the union told him the trip was "inadvisable"-presumably because someone had belatedly remembered the rhapsodic verse he wrote about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Russia: A Spit in Time | 8/18/1967 | See Source »

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