Word: badness
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Just about the only things yesterday's non-league win did was assure the Cantabs of their second consecutive winning season and reassure them that they're not any where near as bad as the loss at Brown would have you think...
...such a drastic measure. For the unquantifiable, unclear benefit of "making a statement" which might affect national policy the law will have two distinct negative effects on Cambridge. One is its impact on jobs. The law will force at least one company to close down, and will send a bad message to others. Cambridge already has some of the strictest business regulations in the country, and the Nuclear Free question would make them even tighter. Proponents assert that the referendum "mandates" more labor intensive industry and therefore will actually create jobs. But as long as a free market economy exists...
...union officials felt the company was negotiating in bad faith, John Murphy, a business agent for Local 122, told the city council last night...
...pranksters of surrealism, spiking café chat in bohemian Paris with cute conspiracies like sneaking a pornographic movie into a children's matinee. Back in the 1920s, the aesthetics of atrocity had worthy, powerful antagonists: the church, the government, the standard of fettered sexuality. Too soon though, the bad-taste revolution proved successful, and today the fractured visual logic of Un Chien Andalou can be found in Vogue graphics and on MTV. For the surrealists, the price of victory was high: acceptance by the hated bourgeoisie. Buñuel must have sighed in agreement when his friend Andre Breton...
...number of TV shows that have revolved around the summer game can be counted on the fingers of a catcher's mitt: Ball Four and The Bad News Bears. Both lasted less than a season, giving credence to the network adage that sports only play on the field, never on the sound stage...