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

Enjoying some Mexican food after their race, Deirdre M. Frey and Hilary B. Cox of the Cornell crew agreed that while the results of the race are important, the Head of the Charles is a fun event for the participants as well...

Author: By Malka A. Older, | Title: Crowds Gather for Regatta | 10/23/1995 | See Source »

...important as the spring [races] because this is our first race," said Cox. "We know we have to race these people in the spring, but we've never gone up against them before, so we're just checking them...

Author: By Malka A. Older, | Title: Crowds Gather for Regatta | 10/23/1995 | See Source »

What works best in this new version of Company, as Robert wanders among his married friends examining one marriage after another, is the tender moments. Veanne Cox is delightful as a bride balking at the church door. With wildly wobbling knees but a dizzyingly sure tongue, she rattles off an ever accelerating catalog of reasons why she shouldn't walk down the aisle. And Robert Westenberg, contemplating Robert's inquiry, "You ever sorry you got married?" offers a splendid version of that bittersweet hymn to ambivalence Sorry--Grateful. Westenberg vindicates the suspicion of those who (overlooking the cheesy arrangement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THEATER: TIME SHIFT | 10/16/1995 | See Source »

...cable-TV and local phone companies enter one another's business. Other firms, including long-distance carriers, could also provide local phone service. Result: one-stop shopping in which companies would offer packages of telephone and TV services directly to the home. With that in mind, cable firms TCI, Cox Enterprises and Comcast last year joined forces with Sprint to develop a nationwide network for delivering cable and telephone signals to the same customers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: READY, WILLING, CABLE | 7/31/1995 | See Source »

Harvard professor Harvey Cox, a prominent theologian, credits Pagels with "a sixth sense'' for finding unrecognized patterns in familiar material. Her critics ask whether she blames Christian sources too much for an all too human tendency to demonize. "Mao did it without any reference to Christianity," observes Jeffrey Burton Russell, a specialist on Satan at the University of California at Santa Barbara. Others say Pagels finds the devil in passages where he is never explicitly mentioned or overplays marginal texts. Pagels is merely "scavenging at the edges of tradition,'' says Father Richard Neuhaus, editor of the religious monthly First Things...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE DEVIL MADE ME DO IT | 7/31/1995 | See Source »

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