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Word: dig (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...discovering, this silver lining comes with a cloud. At the big firms that pay those high salaries, associates commonly work at uninspiring tasks, poring over old court decisions and statute books, then drafting memos for the higher-ups. Rarely meeting clients or standing up to argue in court, they dig again and again into the same tiny areas of cases they never approach as a whole. Above all, they work punishing hours. Personal lives go by the wayside as they put in 70-hour weeks, struggling to bill clients for anywhere from 2,000 to 2,500 hours a year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Law: Rattling the Gilded Cage | 8/11/1986 | See Source »

...national state of emergency. It stated that 33 community groups, student organizations and labor unions in Johannesburg were forbidden to hold any indoor meetings, their outdoor meetings having already been banned in June. An immediate storm of protest broke loose, the kind that usually inspires the Pretoria government to dig in its heels. Instead, two days later, the Bureau for Information, the sole official outlet of news on the emergency, announced that the government was making an about-face. "Errors" had been made in the original order, the statement said, and the ban on indoor meetings did not apply...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: South Africa the Rise of Black Labor | 7/21/1986 | See Source »

...prime uses: archival scanning that once required exhaustive card- catalog searches and high-speed analysis of myriad numbers until the machine kicks out revelatory patterns. In 1979, for instance, the Miami Herald scanned with a computer all 2 million of Dade County's property-tax assessments to dig out inequities. In 1984 Long Island's (N.Y.) Newsday parsed every state- awarded highway contract in the area and all major county sewer contracts over eleven years to discover that five favored firms collected 86% of the boodle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: New Paths to Buried Treasure | 7/7/1986 | See Source »

...scraphogs," and a few wear T shirts with a cartoon of a wild boar grinding a bomb in its teeth. Just after dawn each day, about 40 gather at the hillside, pick up pails and sift through the dirt and sagebrush for rusted metal and twisted steel. They occasionally dig up the nozzle of a Polaris missile or the casing of a 1,000-lb. bomb. Under the pitiless Nevada sun, each averages 1,000 lbs. of scrap metal a day. "It's rough work," says Billy Marshall of Hawthorne, Nev. "When I started, young guys would spend...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Scraphogs Invade Hawthorne | 6/30/1986 | See Source »

Three quick unanswered goals off draws in the middle of the period put the Crimson in a hole it could not dig...

Author: By Mark Brazaitis, | Title: Green Beans Laxwomen for Ivy Title | 5/2/1986 | See Source »

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