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Word: subterraneanly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Staff writers for the old The Subterranean Review, which ceased publication last year because of what one member described as a rightward swing in the student body, said yesterday that they are meeting with a new corps of campus leftists in an effort to launch a revamped version of the magazine...

Author: By Peter J. Keith, | Title: Leftist Journal May Return | 9/27/1990 | See Source »

Organizer Paul N. Gailiunas '92 described his vision of the new Subterranean Review as a "no-holds-barred magazine that will relentlessly put forth views that have not yet been given a full arena...

Author: By Peter J. Keith, | Title: Leftist Journal May Return | 9/27/1990 | See Source »

...border, but little did they know how much truth there was in the metaphor. Last week astonished U.S. Customs agents unearthed an elaborate tunnel that began in the Mexican town of Agua Prieta and emerged 200 ft. away in Douglas, Ariz. Five ft. high and 4 ft. wide, the subterranean pathway had electric lighting, water pumps and storage compartments for drug caches. "It was just an exceptionally professionally engineered tunnel," said a Customs official. Agents first began to suspect the tunnel's existence last February, when a drug shipment they were tracking seemed to mysteriously disappear. Two weeks ago, they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Border: Arizona Pipeline | 5/28/1990 | See Source »

Stuck in a subterranean Miami jail cell and facing charges that could keep him imprisoned for life, Manuel Antonio Noriega would seem to be a beaten man. So much for appearances. According to federal law-enforcement officials, Noriega is fomenting trouble by penning political directives and having them faxed to his followers back home...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Panama: Sincerely, Manuel | 5/21/1990 | See Source »

...lately worked in a program to train homeless people in construction, had all the credentials of an earnest victim. Civil rights leader Roy Innis rallied to Sumter's defense, as did editorialists from the city's newspapers. "How many subway riders, wary of the deranged homeless who make the subterranean world so menacing, have not fantasized responding to assault with violence?" wrote social commentator Myron Magnet in the New York Times. Public wrath at the homeless was so palpable that the Rev. George Kuhn felt the need to admonish restraint at the funeral of Sumter's still unidentified victim. "Homeless...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: New York City, U.S.A. Shrugging Off The Homeless | 4/16/1990 | See Source »

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