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

...boats suffered structural damage when it was knocked from the hangar and wedged between two rafters. Although rescue officials covered the area with flame-retardant foam, none of the sails were damaged, Horn said...

Author: By C. R. Mcfadden, | Title: Investigators Offer Theories On Crash | 2/24/1995 | See Source »

...Jerusalem. The entrance foyer duly gives onto the shop and a meeting room and a children's art studio and a conference theater; the architect calls the foyer an internal piazza, but its main use is probably for giving parties-just as, in New York City, the giant glass hangar containing the Met's Temple of Dendur has devolved into the only post-Ptolemaic discotheque in the world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A SOARING WELL OF LIGHT | 1/30/1995 | See Source »

...architect Philip Johnson, the sushi bar in a private corporate dining room had a tiny stream running through its marble counter. The $100 million makeover of Sony's Culver City studio lot included pillars adorned with elaborate murals. A fleet of corporate jets sat in the hangar, and fresh cut flowers were delivered daily to executives. The corporate culture seemed to say that to pamper is to prosper...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: So Many Dreams So Many Losses | 11/28/1994 | See Source »

...jogs and swims (more of the latter since he injured his neck in a car accident two years ago), plays basketball and went to the All-Star baseball game in July. His No. 1 passion is auto racing. Letterman keeps a collection of foreign sports cars in an airplane hangar in Santa Monica, pores over British racing magazines and takes a different friend each year to the Indianapolis 500, part of his campaign to show that the sport is "more than cowboys in cars going as fast as they can." Racing has a nostalgic appeal for Letterman, who grew...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: David Letterman: New Dave Dawning | 8/30/1993 | See Source »

...Hard Way: The Odyssey of a Weekly Newspaper Editor is a humbler story, set not in New York or Washington but in Kennebunk, Maine. The paper in question isn't an influential national daily with a staff of thousands and a news room the size of an airplane hangar, but a small weekly struggling to survive. The issues aren't Watergate or the Vietnam war, but whether the town should build a water tower behind a local church, and whether the school bus should change its route in order to pick up Herman Cohen's children...

Author: By Ira E. Stoll, | Title: In Maine, an Editor-Publisher Became a Star the Hard Way | 7/23/1993 | See Source »

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