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

...Mohawk? No, when they say that, I'm honored, because I'm proud to be along with the Mohican Indians and all that, but there's a tribe in Africa, the country of Mali, that wear their hair this way, they're called the Mandinke warriors. I trace it through the National Geographic Magazine, so you know they don't tell no lie. That wasn't in People magazine, be better than your People magazine, but so the hairstyle like I said is a Mandinke, they wear it this...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The story behind the chains, the mohawk, the earrings | 10/7/1993 | See Source »

...American Art in the 20th Century" should have been a drop-dead show -- but it isn't. Perhaps, given the internal struggle between Rosenthal of Beijing and Rosenthal of Piccadilly, it was doomed from the start. It sets out to trace the history -- or what its curators consider the high points of the history -- of American painting and sculpture from 1913, the date of the famed Armory Show, to the flatlands of our fin de siecle in 1993. But it has no intellectual cogency and, although it assembles a number of fine and historically emblematic works of art, it doesn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The View From Piccadilly | 10/4/1993 | See Source »

...There was no trace of gender discrimination" in the Dalton tenure decision, he said. "I think we ultimately would have...

Author: By Anna D. Wilde, | Title: Law School Settles Case Of Sex Discrimination | 9/22/1993 | See Source »

...tailored and with a face like a silver teapot, glides through the crowd; and police murmur discreetly into cellular intercoms. But otherwise it's like being shepherded, en masse, through an empty stage set. Nobody here but us tourists. What you see is what you get. The only domestic trace is a mysterious table in the anteroom to the Ministers' Staircase, on which sit a bottle of Malvern water (unopened) and two glasses (turned upside down). What is the meaning of this Magrittean still life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Buckingham Palace: 18 Rms, No Royal Vu | 8/30/1993 | See Source »

...Bush raced around in his cigarette boat and tended his East Coast patrician roots. When some of these Presidents spent many weeks away from Washington at these August sanctuaries, only editorialists, not the public, seemed to object. Absent from this list is Jimmy Carter, whose peanut farm left no trace on the citizenry's imagination; after he left office, however, Carter did have built as a country place a modest log cabin in the Georgia woods, making him, as was said at the time, the only person ever to go from being President to living in a log cabin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hail to The Vacationer-in-Chief | 8/30/1993 | See Source »

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