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

Most Wanted." After a somewhat slow start, thisguilty goody picks up momentum until you can onlybear to put the book down to spread the juicygossip. Is Bahar really pregnant? Who is the girlwho looks like Sylvia Plath? Was Jake at the sceneof the crime? And with whom will Drew sleep next...

Author: By Diane W. Lewis, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Burning Girl | 4/23/1999 | See Source »

Because of the program, though, Chen got to see the places most tourists are kept from. Her second sponsor, Deputy Director of the Office of Management and Budget Sylvia Mathews '87, took Chen on a tour of the West Wing of the White House...

Author: By Victoria C. Hallett, SPECIAL TO THE CRIMSON | Title: BREAKING into the BELTWAY | 4/9/1999 | See Source »

Neither Marshall nor his wife Jean, both computer programmers in Los Alamos, N.M., who have lived next door to Wen Ho and Sylvia Lee since 1980, believe their friend is capable of doing what the U.S. government suspects: passing to China some of the most damaging nuclear secrets in U.S. history. "I've gone from shock to compassion to outrage," Jean says. "This just doesn't jibe with anything I know about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who Is Wen Ho Lee? | 3/22/1999 | See Source »

...very bad), the book founders on Malcolm's signature theme: the biases of the journalist as a narrator who chooses sides in the fight over which stories are true. While her last book, The Silent Woman, used the controversy over the death and estate of the suicide poet Sylvia Plath to illuminate brilliantly these questions of authority, here the justice system becomes her battleground; lawyers dispute not over matters of law but something more beautiful and strange, the power of stories to overwhelm the truth. The lit-crit quibbling of this approach at times quickly becomes tedious. Still, these cerebral...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Malcolm Convicts with Innocent Pleasure | 3/5/1999 | See Source »

Anti-sexual and suicidal, female American poets often fall into the wrong hands. As teenagers we read Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton and even Emily Dickinson with hungry self-identification, and then as teen angst recedes we discard them. In high school, I was assigned Plath at about the same time I discovered Tori Amos, and, like many, I clung onto both of them like a die hard indie fan. But then, growing up, realizing we demanded odd things of love, our parents and our world, we tend to brush off these brilliant-brave complainers as if their long struggles with...

Author: By Benjamin E. Lytal, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: In The Absence of Angst | 2/19/1999 | See Source »

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