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

...often wonder why, when I stumble out of bed in the morning, I look for information about the interesting, insightful and compelling events that happened at Harvard the previous day in the "Names and Faces" column of The Boston Globe...

Author: By Noelle Eckley, | Title: READER REPRESENTATIVE | 5/16/1997 | See Source »

Parents ought to read the instinctively wise and warm article "Why Johnny Can't Sleep" [HEALTH, April 14]. Years ago child psychologist Bruno Bettelheim told me that the isolation and separateness in American society were not necessarily healthy. Children who sleep in bed with family members learn important behaviors about getting along with others socially. This idea was greatly reinforced for me while I was director of the Southeast Asian refugee program for children, ages 1 to 6, at the Indochinese Center in Portland, Oregon. Seeing firsthand how much better socially adjusted and emotionally mature these war-torn, Third World...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: May 12, 1997 | 5/12/1997 | See Source »

University Lutheran is a 22-bed facility believed to be the only entirely student-run homeless shelter in the United States, said Stephanie M. Mayer '97-'99, the shelter's co-director...

Author: By Courtney A. Coursey, | Title: Center Releases City's First Homeless Census | 5/9/1997 | See Source »

...Necessary Hunger is the kind of irresistible read you start on the subway at 6 p.m. on the way home from work and keep plowing through until you've turned the last page at 3 a.m. in bed. The setup: a Japanese-American high school basketball player falls in love with a rival African-American player. Complication No. 1: Both are girls. Complication No. 2: Their single parents (one's dad and the other's mom) fall for each other too. Revoyr's great accomplishment is that her story is never strained. It beats with the pulse of life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: NO MAN'S LAND | 5/5/1997 | See Source »

Then in 1990 a new doctor suggested a radical solution: Ventura should go back on morphine and stay on it. Drug companies had developed a timed-release formula that had proved helpful in other cases. The treatment allowed Ventura to abandon his hospital bed and, for the first time, lift his infant son. The downside was that he was chemically dependent on morphine; the upside was that he was no longer in pain. "I had a lot of trepidation about taking narcotics," says the ex-cop, now 46. "But until I was put on sustained-release morphine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE CASE FOR MORPHINE | 4/28/1997 | See Source »

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