Word: atlanta
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Competition is also beginning to pit Bell vs. Bell. U.S. West, based in Englewood, Colorado, last year acquired two cable-TV systems that serve 500,000 homes in Atlanta; in addition to cable programs, U.S. West will use the systems to offer local phone service and thereby steal customers away from BellSouth...
...groups, though now thoroughly secular in their aims, have roots in the church. Their vocals are thus full of transporting religious passion, redirected to more worldly concerns. Xscape comprises two sisters, Latocha and Tamika Scott, and two of their friends, Kandi Burruss and Tameka Cottle. The members of the Atlanta-based group became friends in grade school. The Scotts were avid churchgoers, Burruss says, and "if you hung with them, you had to go to church every Sunday, Wednesday and Friday." All four ended up in the choir together...
Progress toward developing a diagnostic test for the HGE bacterium has been slow. One of the companies that funded some of the key research has filed for bankruptcy. So far, only the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta and one other research lab have access to the bacterial samples. Experts cannot predict when an accurate diagnostic test will be available...
...Star Game. The "Tornado," Hideo Nomo, touched down, of course, and everyone was eager to see the Dodgers' Japanese rookie with the outrageous windup and the diabolical fork ball. But while Nomo was tailed by 150 Japanese journalists and almost as many American ones, a bookish-looking Atlanta Brave went largely unnoticed, even though Greg Maddux is the best pitcher of this generation. That's partly the failing of the baseball media, but then Major League Baseball has never done much to promote its players for fear it might drive up salaries. So instead of Greg Maddux...
...move that took a heavy personal toll, Freeh demoted deputy director Larry Potts, 47, a 21-year veteran long under fire for his supervision of the Waco and Ruby Ridge sieges. Freeh and Potts had been close friends and confidants since 1990, when they were detailed to Atlanta and successfully prosecuted a murderous mail bomber. They soon became the FBI's odd couple. Freeh was the steely, immaculately tailored prosecutor whom colleagues respected and feared; Potts was the kindly, slightly rumpled investigator agents admired and loved. Three months ago, when Potts was promoted to the No. 2 spot, Freeh boasted...