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Word: bloom (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...high-ranking employee of the Department of Energy during the Carter Administration, Paul Bloom, 41, zealously investigated violations of federal oil-pricing regulations-and forced guilty oil companies to ante up hefty fines...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Great Giveaway | 2/23/1981 | See Source »

...male preserve of politics, she became the first U.S. woman Governor ever elected in her own right (a few others followed their husbands). Admirers talked about Grasso as a future Vice President or Cabinet member, but she preferred Hartford to Washington. She kept a sign in her living room: BLOOM WHERE YOU ARE PLANTED...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Connecticut's Favorite Daughter: Ella T. Grasso 1919-1981 | 2/16/1981 | See Source »

...script does little more than gesture half-heartedly in both directions. Since Jeffrey Bloom served as both director and author, blame is easy to place. For instance, a bag lady watches over the beach. She is an overblown caricature (with so much paraphenalia that she needs a huge shopping cart, and looking about as crazy as the washer-woman Carol Burnett did at the end of her shows), but with no real purpose. She makes mysterious soothsayings, but remains aloof during times of crisis. But is she a parody of a God-figure, or simply an underdeveloped character...

Author: By David M. Handelman, | Title: Geritol Case | 2/4/1981 | See Source »

...looking for a person, or a thing? Is it real, or unreal?" It's all really just too stupid to be funny. The California cop tells his men; "Stretch your minds, tickle your brains, eat fish, get stoned-I don't care. We need ideas." This sounds like Jeffrey Bloom's screenwriting methodology. And, unfortunately, it doesn't work...

Author: By David M. Handelman, | Title: Geritol Case | 2/4/1981 | See Source »

...When the bloom was on the roads, the American who would not-or could not-drive a car was dismissed as a sponger or a dimwit, doomed to a life of dependence on alien wheels and, quite likely, celibacy. The nondriver was a rara Avis (though he could not rent one), akin to the kiwi, a bird that cannot fly. In a country that relies so heavily on the auto for its bread and butter and most of its honey, he was seen and often scorned as a kind of self-decreed cripple...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: Kiwi in the Catbird Seat | 1/26/1981 | See Source »

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