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

Whatever the scientific conclusions, Bill Wordham, a spokesman for the Tobacco Institute trade group, contends that the court cases are an invasion of privacy: "We have to ask ourselves where this would stop. Is a parent who habitually takes a child to MacDonald's or otherwise feeds that child unhealthy food any less deserving of custody? What about a parent who allows his child to watch long hours of television?" Some nonindustry observers agree, conjuring up visions of government antismoking patrols. Says Thomas Harvey Holt, a Visiting Fellow at the Capital Research Center in Washington: "Smokers soon may find social...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Home Smoke-Free Home | 10/25/1993 | See Source »

...People might be smoking less, but they're smoking better," Macdonald says. "They're going for better quality and more expensive tobacco...

Author: By Nicholas Corman, | Title: A Smokers' Haven at Smoke-Free Harvard | 10/6/1993 | See Source »

...Paul J. Macdonald, whose family owns the store today, is not concerned that the store's customer base is changing...

Author: By Nicholas Corman, | Title: A Smokers' Haven at Smoke-Free Harvard | 10/6/1993 | See Source »

...storyteller's ancient, changeless pattern develops, working as well in Denmark and Greenland as it did for Ross Macdonald in his Lew Archer novels of darkest California and for Martin Cruz Smith and the series that began with Gorky Park in Moscow. Smilla puts her nose in harm's way and gets it bloodied. Like Archer and like Smith's Russian cop Arkady Renko, she keeps on poking. She's in peril in a glossy casino near Copenhagen, on a powerful, mysteriously equipped icebreaker plowing north toward Greenland, on the floating metal atoll of a huge fueling dock, and finally...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Big Hit, A Small Miss | 9/13/1993 | See Source »

...Babysitter III or Monster -- and there are suddenly a remarkable number of books very much like them -- do not reach such underage readers by subterfuge or stealth. Adolescents now constitute a booming niche market for the peddling of published gore and violence. "Teens' interests go in cycles," says Patricia MacDonald, editorial director of Archway Paperbacks, an imprint of Pocket Books and a major player in the teen-horror field. "In the '70s it was problem novels, the disease of the week. Then it was romance novels, soap operas like Sweet Valley High and Sweet Dreams...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Carnage: An Open Book | 8/2/1993 | See Source »

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