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Word: hating (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...hate lines too, and I hate to stand in them." Reardon said. "But I think that the person who goes and stands in line should have at least an equal shot at getting tickets with the guy who sits in his room. Somebody who wants to buy 12 tickets can go to the Garden...

Author: By Andy Doctoroff, | Title: 113 Tickets For My Friends | 3/2/1983 | See Source »

...openings: Pancake hits the ground running and his beginnings are as tightly packed with meaning as his epiphanic endings. A story as concise as "The Honored Dead" has to be re-read at least once: a tour de force of technique, the story explores the complex mixture of guilt, hate, envy, love, and grief that William a young husband and father, feels for Eddie his oldest and best friend. The story jump about in time to tell how William avoided the draft and courted Ellen, his future wife, while Eddie was killed in Vietnam, and how Eddie possibly fathered Ellen...

Author: By Robert E. Monror, | Title: A Single Flame | 2/28/1983 | See Source »

...hate war whether it is fought for religious or political reasons or whether it is hot or cold. Why, then, do we have to have special movies about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Feb. 28, 1983 | 2/28/1983 | See Source »

...awarded a Pulitzer Prize for journalism in 1961, is now noted for the objectivity of his portraits of the youthful Winston in Churchill: Young Man in a Hurry and of the aged Willie in Maugham. But they are edged with steel. Morgan, 50, feels that either love or hate is a dangerous conceit. Says he: "You have to be clinical, like a coroner dissecting a corpse." His scalpel reveals a Churchill swollen with hubris and a stingy Maugham pathologically concealing his homosexuality from the public. Morgan, like his colleagues, perceives his subjects in novelistic terms: "What I am looking...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Raw Bones, Fire and Patience | 2/21/1983 | See Source »

...walls are covered with red, black and yellow T-shirts reading "I hate the Capitalist system" and "Question Authority." Calendars entitled "Women Working" and "Human Rights"--rather than the standard Garfield, Ziggy and Sierra Club brands--fill the shelves. Pamphlets and fliers for forums on Women's Rights, Gay Liberation, and anti-draft colloquiums spill over all available counter space. This is no ordinary book store...

Author: By Mary F. Cliff, | Title: Red Book Sells Radical Wares | 2/17/1983 | See Source »

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