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

...news agency faced a new challenge: to enhance its credibility by reporting more aggressively, more thoroughly and more accurately than ever before. Nowadays the agency's attitude is reflected in the instructions given by Grigory Arslanov, 55, director of TASS's coverage of socialist countries, to his staff in Bucharest: "I gave them one order. Write the truth and describe the real situation there...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: Glasnost Comes to TASS | 4/9/1990 | See Source »

...probably won't. That sort of response went out with the retreat from Afghanistan and the introduction of Pizza Hut to Bucharest. Gorbachev the born-again capitalist should screw his adversaries and make them think they're getting the better deal. That's what Donald Trump advises...

Author: By Beth L. Pinsker, | Title: Freedom at Fire Sale Prices | 3/21/1990 | See Source »

Babies are born with malformed hearts, children suffer from bronchial asthma, and adults struggle with lead poisoning. Suau's stark photographs are but one glimpse of the anguished land left behind by Nicolae Ceausescu, who put Copsa Mica (pop. 6,000) into industrial overdrive. Situated 150 miles northwest of Bucharest, the town is in the county of Sibiu, which was once governed by the late dictator's son Nicu. Likely to go on trial within the next few months, Nicu could receive life imprisonment if convicted. A more appropriate punishment might be to sentence him to spend the rest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Romania The Blackest Town In the World | 3/19/1990 | See Source »

...sight is sickening and terrifying. In crib after crib lie babies and toddlers who look like old people, their skin shriveled, their skeletal faces bearing the unmistakable mark of approaching death. These pitiful children at a clinic in Bucharest are AIDS patients, the tiniest victims of the brutal, backward regime of Rumania's fallen dictator, Nicolae Ceausescu...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Rumania's Other Tragedy | 2/19/1990 | See Source »

...existed in Rumania. But the dictator had raised the odds that it would become a problem by outlawing birth control and sex education -- two mainstays of AIDS-prevention efforts elsewhere in the world -- in an attempt to boost his country's population. In January 1989, Dr. Ionel Patrascu, of Bucharest's Stefan S. Nicolau Institute of Virology, decided to test a handful of patients for the virus as part of a research project. Amazingly, the first child screened, a twelve-year-old girl, was infected. Of 14 more children examined at the same pediatric clinic, six harbored the virus. Working...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Rumania's Other Tragedy | 2/19/1990 | See Source »

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