Search Details

Word: woman (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...names of the young woman and the man who was injured were not available. Sevieri said the woman gave a Harvard address to police when describing the incident...

Author: By Melissa R. Hart, | Title: Fight Erupts in Sports Bar | 9/20/1988 | See Source »

According to David Ferguson, the manager of the bar, the fight began when David Reynolds, 35, of New Bedford, was verbally abusive to a young woman. When one of her companions attempted to defend her, Reynolds hit him with a bottle...

Author: By Melissa R. Hart, | Title: Fight Erupts in Sports Bar | 9/20/1988 | See Source »

...does Polly, a fortyish art historian at work on a biography of a brilliant, little-known woman painter named Lorin Jones, really have a problem? Polly's women friends don't think so. Most of them are solitaries of one sort or another, and they warmly support her isolation. She is well shed, they feel, of her first husband, a medical researcher who, a few years before, with typical male arrogance, left Manhattan for a job in Denver, forcing Polly to choose between marriage and her museum job. Her only difficulty, in this view, is that their delightful 13-year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Sexual Detente THE TRUTH ABOUT LORIN JONES | 9/19/1988 | See Source »

...couple of weeks after the trials, news turned sour. The team's freshest ) and most promising woman sprinter, a square-rigged stormer named Angel Myers, from Americus, Ga., who had qualified in ba timlibthree events, was banished for a drug violation. She claimed that tests misread a birth-control drug as a steroid. But she was out, replaced by Butterflyer Janel Jorgensen and Freestyler Jill Sterkel (who thus made her fourth Olympic team...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Track: The Long And Short of It | 9/19/1988 | See Source »

When Mary Decker Slaney fell agonizingly to the turf in Los Angeles in 1984, a victim of tangled feet with Zola Budd, it seemed to be the painful end of an Olympic dream. The young woman, who at 21 began amassing world records, established herself as America's best middle-distance runner. But luck was never with Slaney, who seemed star-crossed where the Olympics were concerned. During the 1976 Games she was laid up with leg injuries, and she had to sit out the following Olympics because of the U.S. boycott. And by the summer of '88, Slaney would...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Track Shorts: End for the Slaney Jinx? | 9/19/1988 | See Source »

Previous | 170 | 171 | 172 | 173 | 174 | 175 | 176 | 177 | 178 | 179 | 180 | 181 | 182 | 183 | 184 | 185 | 186 | 187 | 188 | 189 | 190 | Next