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Word: abroadly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

Once one has memorized all the information on the Boston, Miami, London, San Fransisco, Los Angeles and New York casts, it's time to learn a little about Road Rules, the popular Real World spin-off. In Road Rules: Passport Abroad, authors Alison Pollet and Leif Ueland have collected behind-the-scenes gossip and personal information that America has been salivating for ever since it first glimpsed five beautiful young men and women traveling cross-country in their very own Winnebago. Focusing on seasons three and four, Pollet and Ueland summarize the series of missions that the cast members...

Author: By Josh N. Lambert, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Some Literature for the Illiterate: The MTV Generation Hits the Books | 11/7/1997 | See Source »

...true MTV disciple, the most exciting sections of both The Ultimate Insider's Guide and Passport Abroad are the final pages, in which the reader is offered a chance to apply to the shows. Though 12,234 people applied for the seven spots in the Real World Boston cast, The Ultimate Insider's Guide seems to think you have a pretty good shot. "Just be yourself," the producers advise, and present a seven-page application with such intellectually stimulating questions as "What do you think about people who do drugs?" and "How important is sex to you?" The questionnaire...

Author: By Josh N. Lambert, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Some Literature for the Illiterate: The MTV Generation Hits the Books | 11/7/1997 | See Source »

Harvard students should not have politics imposed on their palettes. Agri-business is not loving to its workers in any area of the industry. While there are better conditions in the United States than abroad, the large number of illegal immigrants in agriculture makes it easy to circumvent legal workplace regulations...

Author: By Adam J. Levitan, | Title: Palettes Not Politics | 11/4/1997 | See Source »

...much ice in American minds preoccupied with Tiananmen Square, Tibet and Taiwan, not to mention the Communist Party. That's precisely why China's President Jiang Zemin is so eager to come here. He may have consolidated power internally, but he desperately wants to affirm his nation's legitimacy abroad. So Jiang's aim during his eight-day state visit, the first since China's bloody suppression of the democracy movement in 1989, is nothing less than to change the minds of Americans about what is going on in China and why they should care about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HOW YOU CAN JUDGE JIANG'S VISIT | 11/3/1997 | See Source »

...Study abroad fellowships...

Author: By Rachel P. Kovner, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Quiz for the Weekend | 10/31/1997 | See Source »

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