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Word: tanked (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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While there has been no clear legal victory inthe battle over Title IX, gender equity seems tobe winning the war for public sympathy. Lastmonth, Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds, creators of thesports comic strip Tank McNamara, made fun of thecoaches of men's sports, many of whom fear thatthe movement for gender equity will hurt theirteams...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Five Questions Facing Harvard Athletics | 9/17/1993 | See Source »

While there has been no clear legal victory inthe battle over Title IX, gender equity seems tobe winning the war for public sympathy. Lastmonth, Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds, creators of thesports comic strip Tank McNamara, made fun of thecoaches of men's sports, many of whom fear thatthe movement for gender equity will hurt theirteams...

Author: By Crimson Staff, | Title: Five Questions Facing Harvard | 9/15/1993 | See Source »

While there has been no clear legal victory inthe battle over Title IX, gender equity seems tobe winning the war for public sympathy. Lastmonth, Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds, creators of thesports comic strip Tank McNamara, made fun of thecoaches of men's sports, many of whom fear thatthe movement for gender equity will hurt theirteams...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Five Questions Facing Harvard Athletics | 9/13/1993 | See Source »

...make an R. For a while, True Romance had the restrictive NC-17 rating, and there's still enough carnage in the R version to make an audience wince out loud. A white drug dealer perforates some black thugs. Palms get sliced, feet corkscrewed, skulls smashed with toilet-tank lids, eyes and other essential organs blown out. The movie climaxes with a dozen or so thugs, druggies, cops -- and that lowest form of slime mold, a movie producer -- edgily pointing heavy artillery at one another...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Goons Go Gun Crazy | 9/13/1993 | See Source »

...Rockies are especially fertile ground for a proliferation of workers who, like Tipple, are variously known as the telecommuters, the modem cowboys or, as Philip Burgess, president of the Denver think-tank Center for the New West, puts it, the "lone eagles." Burgess agrees that "what's happening in the Rockies is not unlike what happened in California in its golden years." But he emphasizes a big difference: "In the Rocky Mountain region, it's not taxi drivers anymore -- it's professional people who realize they can locate anywhere and live by their wits. Many were middle managers who were...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Rockies: Sky's The Limit | 9/6/1993 | See Source »

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