Word: fasted
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...sitted down and, like, all my buddies were talkin real loud and fast, like they were excited or mad or somethin. "Did you see the article `Pointing the Big Finger' in the Crimson?" someone asked me. Great, another story about are great hockey season...
...quick-change artist of the microbe world, a virus that minutely alters its external make-up, dozens of times as fast as the influenza bug. The rapid evolution of the deadly AIDS virus is a source of wonder to scientists. "We have not yet seen two viruses that are identical from two patients," says Dr. William Haseltine, a leading AIDS researcher at Harvard. Where did the deadly germ come from? Did it evolve from a less harmful variety? Last week reports from both sides of the Atlantic offered clues to the origins of the virus that causes acquired immunodeficiency syndrome...
...various as the trendy-tony Palladium and the ever elusive Love Club, which moves at regular intervals. "The clubs are where you go to find out what people are wearing," says Stephen Saban, associate editor of Details, which began chronicling the downtown scene four years ago and has fast become the smartest style magazine in the country. "People who design clothing go to clubs because kids who are the fashion innovators go to them. There is lots of getting ideas and exchanging ideas...
Townsend prefers the Carmel of her past, preserved from fast-food outlets and the like. " 'Save our village' is not just a slogan," she says. "It's an appeal from the heart." Most Carmel residents agree, up to a point. McDonald's will never rear its golden arches within the one-square-mile village, and franchisers are likely to get a warmer reception in Moscow. This is a town that has banned neon and has precious few streetlights or sidewalks. Residents pick up their mail at the post office because houses are identified by names like "Apricot Pit" or "Little...
...quarterly Foreign Affairs, Drucker, currently a professor of social science and management at California's Claremont Graduate School, claims that all the conditions he describes are the products of the modern world economy. It is also a world in which classical economic theory and traditional economic policy are fast becoming irrelevant. The U.S. and other countries, he says, will only continue to prosper if they recognize that fact...