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

...painted!" Hall cried. His coworkers, members of a U.S.-Guatemalan team that was hoping to unearth an undisturbed Mayan crypt, crowded to the rim of the pit. "We all wept and embraced," recalls Archaeologist George Stuart. "There was such a sense of incredible relief. It had been a gamble, and we'd been building up to that moment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Buried Treasure in the Jungle | 6/4/1984 | See Source »

Adams decided to cut right through the platform, which eventually revealed the shaft and then the tomb. "I cried when I saw it," said Stuart, a staff archaeologist for the National Geographic Society, which helped finance the expedition. "I felt a little like a trespasser...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Buried Treasure in the Jungle | 6/4/1984 | See Source »

...profits for recruiters are also high. Search firms earned some $1.2 billion in fees last year, or about 20% more than in 1982. Their total earnings could climb to $1.5 billion in 1984. Says Robert Slater, managing director of U.S. operations for New York City-based Spencer Stuart & Associates: "This is the most significant increase in business that I can recall...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Invasion of the Body Snatchers | 4/23/1984 | See Source »

...times, White's struggle over what American literature and values should be like took comic forms. After Stuart Little had appeared, the reactions at The New Yorker were mixed. Harold Ross shouted at White for saying that the mouse was born, not adopted. White had committed the mortal sin of using the wrong word. Then, reports White...

Author: By John P. Oconnor, | Title: Talk of the Town | 3/20/1984 | See Source »

...taken a hard look at reality, they would never have forwarded the claim that the Social Studies department is a Marxist citadel. Karl Marx is but one of eight theorists, for example, whom sophomores read in their tutorial. Concentrators also pore over the pages of Adam Smith and John Stuart Mill, pillars of the political and economic tradition to which the Republican Club is the delinquent heir. Why, each year department chairman David Landes gives a lecture in which he lambastes Marx as a historian and economist, echoing Raymond Aron's exact words that "Marxism is the opiate of intellectuals...

Author: By William S. Benjamin, | Title: A Hotbed of Radicalism? | 3/16/1984 | See Source »

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