Word: coked
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...seemed to go well beyond mere aesthetic fascination or adolescent rebellion. In one of the book's most disturbing passages, Morrisroe discusses Mapplethorpe's almost pathological hatred of black men, who were ironically, some of his favorite subjects to photograph. Bragging that he could always "catch a nigger with coke," he made a routine practice of picking them up in bars, even after discovering that he was HIV positive...
Meth has always been the poor man's cocaine. Like coke, it can be smoked, snorted or injected, but "it's much cheaper and it gives people a longer high," notes Ed Mayer, head of the Jackson County, Oregon, Narcotics Enforcement Team. For decades, its manufacture and distribution was a low-level enterprise dominated by motorcycle gangs. The current surge is driven by powerful Mexican syndicates, which have found that meth offers far greater profit margins than cocaine or heroin...
Vanesea E. Coke...
...candidates for Radcliffe class marshal are Christiana M. Andemicael, Monica E. Antezana, Sabine F. Balzora, Lynda O. Bermuda, Anurima Bhargava, Elizabeth M. Bucar, Natalee S. Campbell, Lisa M. Castaneda, Chloe M. Chao, Erica S. Cheng, Caroline J. Choi, Vanessa E. Coke, Jennifer R. Dean, Alexandra E. Delaney, Elizabeth A. Downes, Nadeige S. Genece, Pratima Gupta, Anne M. Heavey, Candace M. Hom, Cynthia D. Johnson, Jennifer C. Jose, Deb L. Kozloff, Maren Lau, Reena R. Lawande, Susar, S. Lee, Sylvia S. Lee, Melissa G. Liazos, Kate M. Mansfield, Ana Markovic, Rotonya S. McCants, Jennifer L. Miksis, Margery I. Miller, Christine...
...hysteria continues into the world of infomercials, where TIME's Wendy Cole reports that the company will air a 30-minute "syndicated television special" in 70 major television markets. In an infomercial first, the program will run commercials for other companies, such as Coke, during the half-hour slot which Microsoft purchased, making the commercial appear like regular television programming. "This blurs the distinction between programming and advertising," reports Cole. "But make no mistake, Bill Gates paid for this program. You won't hear anything but good news about Windows...