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

...college green, backed by the high white tower of Baker Library, stands a huge snow sculpture of a prospector panning for gold, so tall (25 ft.) and so frozen that it had to be finished off by students climbing around with pitons and ice axes. On the hilly parts of the college golf course, assorted men of Dartmouth are cheerfully risking life and limb at a crowd-pleasing contest called the Downhill Canoe Race. The Skyway Lodge is full of schussers past and schussers yet-to-be, dates, officials, boots, parkas, day-packs, the friendly slurp of gulped hot chocolate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: American Scene: In Hanover: The Big Green Battle of the Sexes | 3/12/1979 | See Source »

...Denver Broncos and their loyal, long-suffering fans. The Broncos had been the door mat of pro football ?13 straight years before they fashioned a winning season. But with more true grit than could be found in the poorest prospector's pan, Denver fans turned out to cheer their team. The Broncos have sold out every home game played in the '70s, and every year the list of masochists ordering season tickets grew by the thousands. This year, the faithful finally struck the mother lode, division title, American Conference championship, a berth in the Super Bowl...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: It's Denver and Dallas | 1/16/1978 | See Source »

...mountain's name was a fluke. As local historians tell it, in 1896 W.A. Dickey, an ornery gold prospector and one of the first U.S. explorers in the area, fell into an argument with two supporters of William Jennings Bryan and his free-silver movement. The prospector retaliated by naming the mountain after the champion of the gold standard, then Presidential Candidate William McKinley. The name stuck and gradually worked its way into maps and books. Now there is virtually no resistance in the state to the proposed name change. Few Alaskans feel that the long-dead President deserves...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Americana: Pique over the Continent's Tallest Peak | 11/7/1977 | See Source »

...seems to have sprung from a Marlboro ad. In fact this quintessential Texan-moving slowly, talking slowly, even smiling slowly -was born in Albuquerque. From 13 on, he worked as a janitor, a cattle weigher, a powderman in a Colorado mine, a highway surveyor, a truck driver, a uranium prospector...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE SOUTH - THEATER: TexasTripIe Play | 9/27/1976 | See Source »

...excessively profitable, to be sure. As a little old prospector is surprised to learn on one of the line's TV commercials, the railroad is now only one operation of Chicago-based Santa Fe Industries, Inc., which has diversified into such ventures as oil, lumber, pipeline operations and trucking. Last year railroading accounted for more than $1 billion of Santa Fe's $1.4 billion revenues, but only $51 million of the larger company's $150 million profits. Still, that was a creditable performance in an era plagued by railroad bankruptcies, and the outlook for 1976 is even...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CORPORATIONS: What a Way to Run a Railroad | 8/9/1976 | See Source »

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