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

Step two: Get a new label. (See figure 2.) Fortunately enough for our freshman friend, this, like most other necessities of Harvard, was available at the Coop. Avery Label Company makes the requisite three inch by one-third inch label and our friendly neighborhood bookstore stocks boxes of these...

Author: By Brooke A. Masters, | Title: From 18 to 21 In Six Easy Steps | 10/9/1987 | See Source »

Step three: Put the "right" information on the label. His upperclass friends were right when they told him to get a computer. Forget Macpaint, forget c.s. problem sets, forget word processing. He used his computer to duplicate the type on his real i.d. Sure he had to switch around to find a font that matched, but he always knew he would have to work to do well at Harvard...

Author: By Brooke A. Masters, | Title: From 18 to 21 In Six Easy Steps | 10/9/1987 | See Source »

...little premature to label the Harvard women's volleyball team the surprise of the 1987-'88 season--since the season has barely begun--but the Crimson is already turning heads and turning back opponents...

Author: By Michael J. Lartigue, | Title: Spikers Look to Bombard Lowell, Return Home For Big Showdown | 10/7/1987 | See Source »

Worst of all, the article is a McCarthyite smear of my intellectual and personal integrity. I am not a marxist. I deny it, not because I find the label offensive, but for the simple reason that I am not. There is a great tradition of marxist scholarship both here and in Europe, which has influenced me like many other scholars of all political leanings in my generation. However, while respecting and learning from this tradition of scholarship, I have long disagreed with most of its basic tenets. The most cursory reading of my works should make this clear...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Re: Confi Write-Up | 9/25/1987 | See Source »

Equally sharp-eyed Canadian mining companies have snapped up the rights to some 40% of the new gold-digging projects in Montana, Nevada and other Western states. In Northern California, foreign investors have picked up more than two dozen of the region's 300 wineries, among them the Almaden label (now British) and the St. Clement Vineyard (Japanese). In Alaska, Japanese investors control more than one-third of the state's $680 million seafood-packing industry. U.S. farmland might be a bigger target for raiders, except that more than two dozen states have imposed controls or bans on foreign ownership...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: For Sale: America | 9/14/1987 | See Source »

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