Word: 90s
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...think they existed ... I don't think there was a large-scale production program in the '90s." David Kay, stepping down as leader of the U.S. hunt for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, saying his work is finished...
...take down the picketing Maritime Union of Australia. A secret workforce was trained in Dubai, and security guards in balaclavas moved in with Rottweilers to take over Australia's docks (the waterside workers later won their case in court). Across town, at the Belvoir Street Theatre, another late-'90s battle is being restaged. 'An ant is small," says one of the footy fans of Alana Valentine's Run Rabbit Run, 'but if you get enough ants in a bed, they'll drive a man crazy." In this case, the man was Rupert Murdoch, and the ants were members...
...predominately male and haven't showered in days, and many look like they're still working through their Y2K provisions. The Clark campaign also boasts the only volunteer dog, an underfed beagle named Truman. The future lobbyists are at John Kerry's headquarters, where things hum along like a '90s Internet start-up run by well-dressed New Republic readers. The sweet-natured, churchgoing college interns at the Richard Gephardt campaign are far outnumbered by the brawny volunteer ironworkers. Joe Lieberman's nerdy, beleaguered staff, which is the best-liked in town, works out of the most squalid office. Dennis...
...moment of succession, but the public knew soon enough when one had occurred, never mind the rankings. So it was that McEnroe eventually succumbed to Ivan Lendl, who made way for Stefan Edberg. Later, Boris Becker and Jim Courier shone brightest before Pete Sampras reigned through much of the '90s. And now? Well, there's ... no one, really. There's an official No. 1, of course - the American Andy Roddick - but only the tennis nuts would know that for sure. Nearly everyone else would be tossing up between Roddick, the ageing great Andre Agassi, that Swiss guy who's trying...
...Back in the ’90s, there was concern when someone reached one million,” said William Strauss ’69, one of seven members of the Class of 1969 who sent a letter to University President Lawrence H. Summers in November protesting last year’s compensation numbers. “Now it’s 35? What’s the limit? If I were these people, I would give back 30 percent of what Harvard gives me as a gesture...