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Word: reinvent (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...Universities calls them, has risen 27% since 1997. That's more than three times as fast as the growth at all four-year schools. A.P.U. is booming--its student population is up 53% over the same period--and it is becoming a model for how a Christian college can reinvent itself in a modern age. The U.S.'s galloping evangelical movement is fueling part of this growth, but so is a population of young adults craving an active experience with God and spirituality. As it expands, A.P.U. is challenging the stereotypes of evangelical colleges as weak academically and ultraconservative socially...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Higher Learning | 2/2/2004 | See Source »

Froehlich, who says he fell in love with Goethe’s play when he read it a year ago, wanted to reinvent the play for a modern context...

Author: By M. PATRICIA Li, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Student Actors Learn To Bare All for Audiences | 11/21/2003 | See Source »

...town every night now could they? Of course not, for there was a world to conquer, lives to save in the heart of America! A revolution of style to incite, and for the sake of the follow-up, a transcendent, otherworldly cool to preserve, to topple, and to reinvent...

Author: By Leon Neyfakh, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: CD Review | 11/14/2003 | See Source »

...kinds of views or ideas they advocate get adopted and implemented,” says Weatherhead Professor of Public Management Steven Kelman, who worked with Al Gore ’69 in the late 1990s on the then-vice president’s campaign to “reinvent government.” “Or they might get interested in a full time job after the campaign and one way to get that is to help the candidate get elected...

Author: By Jessica E. Vascellaro, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Candidates Ally With Faculty Fundraisers | 10/29/2003 | See Source »

...Angeles property developer did not want an aircraft that would intimidate her. Her flight instructor suggested an airplane that McCollum hadn't even heard of. One demonstration flight later, she was hooked on a Cirrus SR22, a sleek and powerful four-seater whose designers are trying to reinvent the small plane, not to mention the small-plane industry. "I'm a techno-nerd," says McCollum, "and when I saw those two computer screens in the cockpit where there usually are a bunch of round gauges, I immediately felt at ease with all that info. It's like having your laptop...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aviation: Blue Sky For Cirrus | 9/22/2003 | See Source »

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