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Word: dropouts (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...While dropout rates, standardized test scores and teacher morale went down at Taft during its reform period, at Irving they rose and are still rising, Glass said...

Author: By Sarah J. Schaffer, | Title: Glass Talks on School Reform | 10/17/1995 | See Source »

Demi Moore, a high school dropout and Hollywood's highest paid actress, is getting $12.5 million for her upcoming movie "Striptease," the magazine reports. By contrast, Meryl Streep, who has a master of fine arts degree from Yale, earned between $4 and $5 million for "The Bridges of Madison County," Glamour says...

Author: By Andrew L. Wright, | Title: Ivy League Educations Don't Pay off on the Silver Screen | 7/18/1995 | See Source »

...continuing to have monthly bleeding at age 60, a fairly common consequence of some types of hormone therapy. "Why fight vainly to remain in a stage of life you can't be in anymore, instead of enjoying the stage you are in?" asks Dr. Nada Stotland, 51, an HRT dropout. Stotland, a psychiatrist at the University of Chicago, says she is "extra skeptical, because there are powerful forces that aim one toward prescribed hormones, but there is no profit motive in not prescribing something...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE ESTROGEN DILEMMA | 6/26/1995 | See Source »

...this really boring town where I lived. My new rule as Bone was, "Basically don't bother your parents and don't bother the cops or one of them will sic the other on you, because to them, to all of them you're just another homeless stoned dropout dealing small-load boom to the locals." Great, but then Mr. Banks decides for some goofy reason to send me to Jamaica for further adventures. Which I never believed, especially some stuff about finding my jerk of a real father, and you won't either. I mean, Mr. Banks seems...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: FLOAT TRIP | 6/5/1995 | See Source »

...structural decay and besieged by the pathologies of urban poverty. But while money certainly seems in short supply, what is more troubling here is the isolation in which Hartford's students--94% of them African American or Hispanic, nearly 3 out of 4 poor, with a high school dropout rate more than three times the state average--find themselves: a sort of walled city, separated from less troubled suburbs by an invisible color line drawn not by law but by decades of white flight...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SEGREGATION ANXIETY | 4/24/1995 | See Source »

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