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

...Nelson considers the Post to be a hostile working environment for minorities and makes no attempt to toe the corporate line. She explicitly states her intention to not become a member of the black bourgeoisie, which she claims has abandoned the less fortunate blacks who have no strategies of exit from poverty...

Author: By Lorraine Lezama, | Title: Women in Washington Aren't Always Living the Easy Life | 8/13/1993 | See Source »

Derrick A. Bell has cultivated a fair for the dramatic exit...

Author: By Rajath Shourie, | Title: Bell Keeps a Record of Principled Departures | 6/10/1993 | See Source »

...last month's investigation, a constable who worked as a security guard for Cambridge City Hospital would enter a bar and attempt to buy a beer, Scali said. If he was served, he would leave the beer on the counter and exit the bar. If he was asked for identification, he would decline and leave...

Author: By Margaret Isa, | Title: City Sting Nabs Sales To Minors | 6/8/1993 | See Source »

...destined to land him in jail. "To go to jail is the ultimate slavery," he told TIME. "If I have lost my freedom, I have lost something more valuable than life. Therefore, continuing life becomes pointless. It's as simple as that." Dramatic self-negation would be a fitting exit for Death's Impresario. But last week Kevorkian made an uncharacteristically humble reappearance with suicide No. 16. By underplaying his hand, he may have found a way to avoid jail -- and prolong his controversial crusade...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rx For Death | 5/31/1993 | See Source »

...Vietnam-like quagmire (and against the private advice of senior military officers like Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Colin Powell, who believes intervention should be massive or not at all), the President seems bent on adopting a feelgood strategy -- a limited action designed, above everything, to ensure a swift exit, a policy that defines success as merely having done something without regard to the ultimate result. By all accounts, Clinton aims to "level the killing fields," to borrow the words of British Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd. The Serbs, says the President, have benefited from the West's de facto intervention...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Political Interest: Clinton's Feelgood Strategy | 5/17/1993 | See Source »

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