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

...technician and an Escort Service driver. (It was Matt, incidentally, who, while he was recording Science B-15, used to shake the camera every time E.O. wilson talked about sex.) Favorite class at Harvard was Music 178ar, Ivan Tcherepnin's "Composition in the Digital Electronic Medium." Maximum Rock `n' Roll magazine described his singing on the first Fat Day single as "a really young male or a female with great vocals...

Author: By Seth Mnookin, | Title: Fat Day Singer `Moves Kind of Funky' | 6/9/1994 | See Source »

James K. Glassman '69, former managing editor of The Crimson, writes a twice-weekly column for The Washington Post. He is the former publisher of The New Republic and The Atlantic Monthly, and editor of Roll Call, a Capitol Hill newspaper. Reserve Officers Training Corps, investments inSouth Africa, the lack of Black studies and thelike, was playpen stuff. It was intellectuallyengaging, exhilarating and libidinous. But itwasn't the real thing...

Author: By James K. Glassman, | Title: '69 Alumnus Reflects on 'Revolution' | 6/6/1994 | See Source »

...just the seasonal malaise that afflicts film critics, but not moviegoers, as we anticipate the pack mentality of Hollywood that in summer always produces a few hot-weather hits but many more dog-day dogs -- worse, the same breed of dog. This is the season when studio bosses roll out their biggest theories as to what genre the audience will consume in mass quantities. In 1991, action adventure; '92, comedy; '93, kid stuff. And now Naked Trend 4: TV shows turned into movies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CINEMA: Made-From-Tv Movies | 5/30/1994 | See Source »

Instead of agreeing with me, he merely allows his critics' attacks to roll off his back, and he continues to prove his point by doing what he has always done--performing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: U.C.'s Gabay Is A Tireless Worker | 5/23/1994 | See Source »

...time, as before, the problem lay beneath the airport's terrazzo floors, amid the underground warren of computers, conveyor belts, wires and thousands of motors that make up the airport's Disneyesque baggage system. As designed, 4,000 computer-guided fiber-glass carts, each carrying a single suitcase, will roll along 22 miles of serpentine steel tracks, delivering 60,000 bags an hour to and from dozens of distant gates and carrousels. The system employs electromagnetic motors attached to the tracks to power the carts, which are routed and monitored by banks of logic controllers, sensors and photocells...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Bag Stops Here | 5/16/1994 | See Source »

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