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

...computer common room in Bell Laboratories' six-story brick quarters in Murray Hill, N.J., is strewn with a herd of toy sheep, an assortment of plastic ducks and a glass beaker that contains a Madagascar hissing cockroach. Walking along one of the facility's narrow, institutional-green corridors, Mathematician Ronald Graham effortlessly juggles six spinning white balls. Some days the balls are black. Not long ago, in a nearby office, a shimmying belly dancer tried to perk up a brooding scientist who was convinced that he had lost his zest for research. Since its founding on New Year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Critical Mass Bell Laboratories | 6/16/1986 | See Source »

...floor glistens through four coats of polyurethane, reflecting red, blue and yellow blinking lights. The machinery, tenderly adjusted and lubricated and looking like mobile sculpture, whirs and swivels competently behind transparent plastic enclosures. The employees are gung ho, and the most enthusiastic of all is their boss, John Rothwell, 41. "This is my life's dream," he says. "I love it." The atmosphere where they work is electric, suffused with a feeling that what is taking place here, in its boldness and sophistication, is happening nowhere else on earth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Old Milwaukee: Tomorrow's Factory Today | 6/16/1986 | See Source »

...culture a spreading ooze back in the 1950s, when Sylvester Stallone was still just a boy. Today America's righteous pop thug is huge, ubiquitous, swaggering from one medium into the next and the next: he is a movie warrior, he is a TV cartoon character, he is a plastic doll, he is a music-video creature and now, in candy racks all over America, he is chewing gum--Rambo black flak, jagged, black raspberry bits packed in foil pouches and meant to resemble shrapnel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Pop Goes the Culture | 6/16/1986 | See Source »

With its black-tinted panels and pulsing red indicator lights, it bears a striking resemblance to Joshua, the fictional computer that plays chess and thermonuclear war in the movie WarGames. But this is the real thing. Inside a 5-ft. Lexon plastic cube is a powerful new computer called the Connection Machine, which not only looks different from most mainframes, it is different...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Computers: Letting 1,000 Flowers Bloom | 6/9/1986 | See Source »

Glitzed-out revelers will be able to hear Harvard's best and brightest discourse and debate on topics ranging from "Protestantism, Puritanism and the Founding of Harvard" to "The Universe: The Beginning, Now and Henceforth" to "How Plastic Fillings Adhere to Teeth...

Author: By Steven Lichtman, | Title: The Big Party | 6/5/1986 | See Source »

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