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

...took up the baton for the first time on the Dvorak. Too often, his motions in the first movement fell out of kilter with what the group was trying to convey. While they drew out long lines for phrases, Yoo still rocked back and forth much like the ticker on an old-fashioned metronome. In this case, there was little evidence to support the typical claim that the ensemble simply wasn't following the leader well enough. At least in the first movement, Yoo's style clearly drew more on his own enthusiasm than on any particular intent...

Author: By Dan Altman, | Title: Morphing Music to Public Appetite | 2/16/1995 | See Source »

...conference drew a mix of public and private school students, mostly white and middle class. Peimer said organizers were "trying to reach a more diverse audience," and predicted that an expanded outreach program would do the trick...

Author: By Victoria E.M. Cain, | Title: Boston Area High School Students Discuss Women's Issues at Lighthouse Conference | 2/13/1995 | See Source »

...span of human prehistory, the Cro-Magnon people who drew the profusion of animals on the bulging limestone walls of the Chauvet cave were fairly late arrivals. Human technology-the making of tools from stone-had already been in existence for nearly 2 million years. There are traces of symbolism and ritual in burial sites of Neanderthals, an earlier species, dating back to 100,000 B.P. (before the present). Not only did the placement of the bodies seem meaningful, but so did the surrounding pebbles and bones with fragmentary patterns scratched on them. These, says Clottes, "do indicate that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BEHOLD THE STONE AGE | 2/13/1995 | See Source »

...Chauvet pullulates with dangerous ones-cave bears, a panther and no fewer than 50 woolly rhinos. Such creatures, to paraphrase Claude Lavi-Strauss, were good to think with, not good to eat. We can assume they had a symbolic value, maybe even a religious value, to those who drew them, that they supplied a framework of images in which needs, values and fears-in short, a network of social consciousness-could be expressed. But we have no idea what this framework was, and merely to call it "animistic" does not say much...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BEHOLD THE STONE AGE | 2/13/1995 | See Source »

...demand shock, the second-most popular class has seen a dramatic surge in enrollment. Literature and Arts C-37, "The Bible and its Interpreters," drew 970 students, up from last year...

Author: By Amita M. Shukla, | Title: Ec 10 Is Most Popular Course | 2/11/1995 | See Source »

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