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

Orange County Goes Bust...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Week December 4-10 | 12/19/1994 | See Source »

Across the continent, meanwhile, Mitsubishi is struggling to survive the New York City real estate bust, which saw commercial-vacancy rates rise from 8% to nearly 14% over the past five years. To reduce its interest expense, the Japanese company hopes to renegotiate the $1.3 billion mortgage it acquired in 1989. (That was the heady period when another Japanese firm, the Minoru Isutani Group, acquired California's famous Pebble Beach golf course for $840 million, which it sold at a 40% loss two years ago.) Mitsubishi threatened to default on its loan last week, which some analysts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: So Many Dreams So Many Losses | 11/28/1994 | See Source »

...with such reverence that they have to be followed as if they were Newton's," says Berman. "You have to treat them very carefully, because there are people who for 25 years have considered them sacred." Even so, there are times he contemplates heresy: on his desk sits a bust of Roddenberry, its eyes and ears covered by a blindfold. "Things are sometimes said in this office that he probably would not like to hear," Berman says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Torch Has Passed Off-Camera, Too | 11/28/1994 | See Source »

Lauren's publication is nothing more than a newfangled collection of buzzwords. The cover of November's premiere issue features text-art including AIDS, the Internet, Sex, Phat, Apathy, Slacker, Segregation, Lollapallooza, Beavis, Butthead, Real World, Influential, Multicultural, Promiscuous, Activists, Brady Bunch, Woodstock, Skeptical, Cynical, Bust, Boom, Driven, Idealist and Hype...

Author: By Joshua A. Kaufman, | Title: Swing Kids | 11/21/1994 | See Source »

...Pakpahan is the sixth official of the Indonesian Prosperity Trade Union to be convicted in connection with workers' riots that wrecked several factories and blocks of shops in Medan earlier this year. Sixteen of his colleagues are still on trial in what looks to many like an attempt to bust a union that the authoritarian Indonesian government views as dangerously independent. U.S. officials "deplored" Pakpahan's sentence and said Clinton would discuss the case and other "problems in the human- rights area," including the closure of three influential publications, with Indonesia's President Suharto this week...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business First, Freedom Second | 11/21/1994 | See Source »

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