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

This year, he took analysis that appeared in The Crimson's game preview on Friday: "The hole in the defense is in the secondary, which has allowed quarterbacks to pick their way through it all season, giving up more than 250 yards through the air each game. Overall, Brown's defense is by far the weak link on an otherwise championship team...

Author: By Bryan Lee, SPECIAL TO THE CRIMSON | Title: BLee-ve It! | 11/8/1999 | See Source »

Wilford set school marks for passing yards and total offense in a game, completing 26-of-34 passes for 398 yards through the air and 387 yards in total offense (he lost 11 yards rushing...

Author: By Timothy Jackson, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Football Looks to Finally Beat Brown | 11/5/1999 | See Source »

...hole in the defense is in the secondary, which has allowed quarterbacks to pick their way through it all season, giving up more than 250 yards through the air each game...

Author: By Timothy Jackson, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Football Looks to Finally Beat Brown | 11/5/1999 | See Source »

...threatened, his ex-employers hire thugs to stalk and scare him, and his wife leaves with their two daughters; he loses everything for a chance to set the record straight and doubts whether the price was worth it. Meanwhile, Bergman can't get Wigand's interview on the air at CBS; Don Hewitt and the corporate heads fear a multi-billion lawsuit from Brown and Williamson, and Bergman must plead with Hewitt and anchor Mike Wallace to get the ground-breaking interview on "60 Minutes." The loose, organic structure of the film works its magic in the first third...

Author: By Rheanna Bates, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Where There's Smoke | 11/5/1999 | See Source »

...character study that dominates the first half begins to unravel when the film, inexplicably, changes its focus from Wigand to Bergman. Just as Wigand is entering his darkest period, becoming psychologically unhinged, the film cuts away to Bergman and his struggles with the brass at CBS. The heroic, moral air that builds up around Bergman in the last third almost suffocates the intricate and brilliant tale before it and threatens to turn the film into a full-blown, us-vs.-them morality tale...

Author: By Rheanna Bates, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Where There's Smoke | 11/5/1999 | See Source »

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