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

...this a hit-list for those who hate dead white males? May be so, but it is also a short (and not at all exhaustive) list of authors one does not have to read to graduate from Harvard. One must wonder, what ever happened to a humane education...

Author: By Thomas B. Cotton, | Title: Returning to the Gymnasium | 4/23/1997 | See Source »

...wonder Senate majority leader Trent Lott was so furious. Instead of working with his leadership to produce a Republican proposal, Hatch devised a bipartisan bill with Kennedy that Republicans will be hard pressed to oppose. Rather than create a Washington-run program, the bill gives block grants to the states to subsidize private insurance for uninsured children, pays for itself by raising taxes on cigarettes and then diverts $10 billion of the five-year proceeds to cutting the deficit. "It's good for children, it will reduce teenage smoking, and it will lower the deficit," Hatch says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HATCHING MISCHIEF | 4/21/1997 | See Source »

...phytoestrogens offer boomers a better bargain? Many women clearly think so. "Close to a natural wonder drug," says UCLA breast-cancer surgeon Dr. Susan Love in her recently published Dr. Susan Love's Hormone Book (Random House, $25). At 49, Love, a vocal and controversial critic of hormone-replacement therapy, has entered perimenopause. To cope, she exercises daily, adds phytoestrogen-rich foods like soybeans and flaxseed to her diet and doses herself with black cohosh, an herbal source of phytoestrogens that comes in liquid or tablet form...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: EARLY FLASH POINTS | 4/21/1997 | See Source »

...People's reading habits are a murky subject," he says. "Unless you catch people in the act, you really have no idea of what's actually happening. There were times when I praised books to the sky and never saw a copy of them in public. It makes you wonder." As a writer, he says, he's "cautiously encouraged" to believe that the latest spurt in reading is a long-term change and not one of those "eight-month trends that, once it's finished, leaves us worse off than we were before...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Contributors: Apr. 21, 1997 | 4/21/1997 | See Source »

...know that your room is burning up right now?" I am appalled by his complete misunderstanding of sarcasm or wit. I admit that Ms. Kirk should have known better than to trust The Crimson with a chance to use swear words in a front-page story. (I do wonder how your alumni readers as well as parents who subscribe to your newspaper react to your casual use of "mother fucking" on the front page.) Nonetheless, I feel that your reporter, or at least an editor should have taken more care with the victim of such a disaster and aimed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Crimson Doesn't Report With Compassion | 4/18/1997 | See Source »

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