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

...country's oil and 70% of its gas, would sell to domestic customers at world prices, which are about five times higher than those now charged to other republics. Yeltsin says signing agreements with the Baltic states would be a top priority, hinting that he might help Lithuania bypass the economic blockade that Gorbachev has enforced to halt its drive for independence. These ideas are radical by any Soviet definition and put Yeltsin directly on a collision course with Gorbachev...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Soviet Union But Back Home . . . | 6/11/1990 | See Source »

...just close their doors to poor people," says Virginia Price-Hastings, director of Los Angeles' trauma hospital programs. "When they're closed, they're closed to everyone." Furthermore, if hospital beds are filled with emergency patients, doctors cannot schedule elective surgeries like breast biopsies, gallbladder removals and cardiac bypasses. Delay a bypass too long, and it can turn into a heart attack -- which brings the patient back to the crowded emergency room...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Do You Want To Die? | 5/28/1990 | See Source »

...that are suffering a meltdown. During the busiest periods, paramedics talk of "medical gridlock." They cannot even unload their ambulances because the emergency room is full, and the emergency room cannot open because every last bed in the hospital is taken. At this point the hospital may go on "bypass" and ask that ambulances be sent elsewhere. But many hospitals that used to go on bypass once or twice a year now do so every week. In California emergency rooms open and shut like tollgates depending on the traffic. Because surgeons were too busy, one homeless woman who was transferred...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Do You Want To Die? | 5/28/1990 | See Source »

...students who needed a quiet place to study at night. And nowadays he goes to heroic efforts to keep in close touch with kids he got to know. Dan Porterfield, an ex-pupil, recalls that in 1983, when Healy had a heart attack followed by a triple-bypass operation, he and a friend drove to New York to visit him. Over a nurse's protest, Healy asked to see them briefly. He was in a welter of tubes and looked ashen. "I felt that even then he was teaching us," says Porterfield, "trying to show us how to cope...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TIMOTHY HEALY : New Page For an Old Bookworm | 5/28/1990 | See Source »

...choose between having a more rewarding academic experience and possibly having a higher GPA, and in retrospect, I do not regret having risked my GPA. As a first-year student, I opted for Advanced Standing. During my sophomore year, I chose to take Government 1061, an upperlevel bypass taught by the notorious Thompson Professor of Government Harvey C. ("C-") Mansfield and Professor of Government Michael Sandel, rather than the dismally rated Government...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Gov's Thesis Policy Dismaying | 4/24/1990 | See Source »

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