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

...should be enough to drive the Coors boys to drink. Workers at the beer company run by the Coors family, longtime funders of the political right, now attend a diversity workshop and get training on sexual harassment. Employees can choose among eight "resource councils"--groups representing gays, women and Native Americans, among others. The company sets aside a specific share of purchases each year for minority-owned firms (what conservatives like the Coorses usually call--gulp--quotas). And the brewer has sponsored everything from a marathon gay dance party in Miami to "the first corporate mammography program in the country...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why Coors Went Soft | 11/2/1998 | See Source »

...Crimson might do well to rethink its endorsement of the Higher Education Act, which calls for government involvement in all campus liquor-law violations (Editorial, Oct. 6). Do the editors really think that having the government informed when first-years are caught with beer will help prevent alcohol-related tragedies...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Government Not the Answer | 10/30/1998 | See Source »

...minutes. Each track is loud, fast-paced and chock full of adrenaline; it's definitely the kind of music head-banging was made for. The music puts you in a completely jittery, violent mood. "I'm the Man," in particular, made me want to drink lots of cheap beer and Southern Comfort, go hollering down a road in a pickup truck with some loud rebel yells, bash some mailboxes with a baseball bat, and then go cow-tip-ping. (Quite an endorsement from a 5'4" Asian girl who mostly listens to Sarah McLachlan and likes to read Pablo Neruda...

Author: By Myung! H. Joh, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: They Came from the Grand 'Ole Opry | 10/30/1998 | See Source »

...Raymond, an un-apologetic drunk, as I sat drawing the vacant S. Klein department store on Broad Street, Newark's main avenue. Nursing a brown-bagged beer at 10:30 on a Friday morning, Raymond sat down next to me and remembered aloud how S. Klein's once anchored the vibrant string of stores along Broad in the fifties and sixties. Thinking back to those days, he praised the treatment of the "little guy" under Mayor Hugh Addonizio, the politician whose bungling and corruption led to the catastrophic 1967 riots...

Author: By Jason R. Stevenson, | Title: Conversations in Newark | 10/29/1998 | See Source »

...universal keycard access is weak. Safety will be compromised by universal access, some claim, because anyone with a Harvard ID can get in anywhere. Wrong. First, who are these Harvard ID-bearers the masters are afraid of? Harvard students? Or is it that mythic unshaven creature of Harvard Square, beer on his breath and bad deeds on his mind, who finds an ID in the crosswalk on Mass. Ave. and jumps at the chance to infiltrate the Harvard system? That is not likely to happen. People don't drop their ID cards on the street all that often. When they...

Author: By Geoffrey C. Upton, | Title: Masters: Open UP And Say Aaahh... | 10/28/1998 | See Source »

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