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Word: subterranean (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Nine years ago Nathan M. Pusey came to Harvard from Lawrence College in Appleton, Wisconsin, to become President of an enormous institution built on layer after layer of sedimented traditions. A slow and delicate play of subterranean forces had brought it to its current stature, a vast and complex machinery that it would be foolish to meddle with too deeply. The University might change, but it would have to change more through a process of natural evolution than through administrative decisions initiating and guiding change...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Administration: I | 4/23/1962 | See Source »

Midway in Jacques Offenbach's frothy operetta La Perichole, a trapdoor opens slowly onstage; from the depths of a subterranean dungeon emerges a doddering old prisoner. He has been digging through various walls for twelve years, and now he is ready to escape. He lasts no more than four minutes onstage before he is forced to flee through the trap again. But to Offenbach fans at Manhattan's Metropolitan Opera, the sequence is one of the comic highpoints of the evening. The man responsible: Italian-born Tenor Alessio de Paolis (pronounced: Pow-o-lees...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Man of Many Parts | 4/13/1962 | See Source »

...unit without a single dissenting line." The idea of purity so ruled his design that CBS had to buy two adjoining lots for a utility building, rather than allow the lines of the tower to be interrupted by truck entrances; supplies will be delivered to the building through a subterranean passageway...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Without a Dissenting Line | 3/2/1962 | See Source »

...leaving the inspection to be discussed later. The talks got hideously complicated with endless debate on technical details. At one stage, the West, discovering to its dismay that underground tests could be concealed from seismographs by exploding the bombs in caves, reversed itself and refused to include small subterranean explosions in the treaty until better detection systems were developed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Russia: A Bang in Asia | 9/8/1961 | See Source »

...conveyor belt, only 16 inches from the street curb. After that, the bags are tagged and weighed while still on the belt, their flight number transmitted by the ticket agent (into a binary decimal code) on a device like a small adding machine, and lifted mechanically to a massive, subterranean maze of conveyors. As they hit the main conveyor belt, the bags are moved 500 feet in one minute to an area below the loading building where they circuit slowly, for as long as 24 hours, until their flight is called. Once the flight is ready, electronic scanners, which "read...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Travel: Paradise, Baggage-Wise | 8/25/1961 | See Source »

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