Word: raggedness
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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But Russo dreamed bigger still. "From the beginning," he says now, "I knew the screen could take this little person with the enormous talent and show her off in a big way." But no project seemed right. So they resurrected Pearl, a script about Janis Joplin, and had it rewritten...
Is intercity bus service, badly hurt by competition from discount airfares, headed the way of the stagecoach? It did not look that way last week, as - ticket buyers by the thousands queued at bus terminals in Dallas, Atlanta and ten other Southern cities, forming ragged lines that stretched for blocks...
--"There are not enough controllers, and too many of them have a low experience level," claims John Galipault, president of the Aviation Safety Institute, a private foundation in Ohio. The number of controllers is down from 16,300 to 14,700 since President Reagan fired striking members of the Professional...
Recalling her family's reaction when she was accepted to Harvard, Dynarski says, "They were proud. But with my sisters there was hostility. I got baited [then] and even more so now. I was like them when I came in; now I get ragged on for being a Harvard snob...
Across the ice, Harvard Coach Bill Cleary was happy with the way his squad rebounded after a surprisingly ragged first period to preserve its two-goal lead.