Word: polled
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Women are often shocked when menopausal symptoms strike in the early 40s. The average age of menopause, after all, is 51. Most know little about perimenopause, and their doctors aren't much help. A Gallup poll of women ages 45 to 60 conducted last year found that only 44% were satisfied with the information they received from their doctors about menopause. Until recently, doctors "simply weren't aware of perimenopause," admits endocrinologist Howard Zacur of Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore. "Changes in the cycle at this time of life were misinterpreted and misdiagnosed...
...Dole's attacks resonate beyond the party faithful, in all senses of the word. In a TIME poll conducted at the end of last week by Yankelovich Partners, Inc., 77% of those questioned said that they were very concerned or fairly concerned about violence in the media; 70% said the same about media representations of sex. With numbers like those, it's a safe bet that Campaign '96 will also be Murphy Brown II, a further chapter of the conservative assault on Hollywood that Quayle launched...
Republicans who talk about the real-life consequences of pop-culture vulgarity still scream at the suggestion of any link between talk-show belligerence and Oklahoma City. Americans aren't so sure. In the TIME poll, 52% of those questioned said they believed that strong antigovernment rhetoric inspires people to violence. And a lot of Americans are already suspicious of any attempt to use the culture issue as a way to evade discussion of everything else that contributes to the fraying of American life, from threadbare schools to the flood of guns. In the TIME poll, 55% of those questioned...
...recent poll by the Undergraduate Council showed that 82 percent of students are against randomization. At the same time, however, 37 percent feel there is a greater need or diversity in the houses...
Newt Gingrich insists that he is not going to New Hampshire this weekend because he's planning to run for president . And that's just the way New Hampshire wants it. A poll of 400 Republicans registered in the state, released today, found that 52 percent would encourage Gingrich toforget about running for presidentif they could speak to him during his visit. (Only 18 percent liked the idea.) If Gingrich were in the race right now, he would place fourth at only 5 percent -- far behindBob Dole, and trailingPat BuchananandSen. Phil Gramm. Meanwhile, a new NBC-Wall Street Journal poll...