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Word: blunderings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...blunder aside, it was actually the Crimson power play that could have won the game time and again?...

Author: By Rebecca A. Seesel, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: M. Hockey Held Without Special Teams Tally | 11/8/2004 | See Source »

...What Part of Lesbian Didn’t You Understand?” buttons in the same place. For those seeking t-shirts more angry and less quirky, Million Year Picnic on Mt. Auburn Street sells a t-shirt that reads “Blunder-Bush, Bush Lied 800 Died, Fire that Liar.” They also carry a furtively explicit “Buck Fush” t-shirt—familiar to Harvard students who sport “yuck fale” gear every November...

Author: By Jonathan M. Siegel, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Fashioning Democracy | 10/28/2004 | See Source »

...self-employed man who hired a lawyer to sort out a blunder by tax authorities has been left facing a €2.2 million bill in legal fees. The man had received a €290 million tax bill on his €17,000 annual salary - a mix-up that took the attorney just an hour to resolve. But under German law, the lawyer is entitled to a fixed percentage of the reduction in tax obtained. Of course, it's nice for the tax man to know that, for once, there is someone less popular than...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Worldwatch | 10/17/2004 | See Source »

...intelligence world, was arrested by federal agents. The diplomatic gaffe was surprising enough: the U.S. keeps contacts with Taiwan at arm's length out of deference to China, and visits to the island by key diplomats are very infrequent and require top-level approval. But the intelligence blunder?exposing himself to blackmail by making the secret trip?was even worse. "Even if he pulled [the trip] off," says one shocked former colleague, "he would then be totally in Taiwan's pocket because they could threaten to go public with it at any time...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Error of Judgment | 9/20/2004 | See Source »

...middle-class civil servant's family in Bhubaneswar, a dirt-poor city in eastern India that is usually given a wide berth by tourists. "Even in Indian terms, it's really remote," she says. Nair was also, she claims, an unwanted child?or, as she puts it, a "contraceptual blunder." In 1957 the Indian government was worried about its exploding population, and her father, a senior bureaucrat, had sworn to limit the family to the two sons they already had. He sent his wife Praveen to a clinic for an abortion, but she couldn't bring herself to go through...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Force of Nature | 9/6/2004 | See Source »

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