Word: bowle
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...busy to be overcome by the aftermath of elections. We share key values. Ultimately, we all want to be able to live decent lives in peace and security. The presidential election almost seems to have taken on the quality of the World Series or the Super Bowl. We each have a favorite, but after the winner has been determined, we can go back to our regular lives. Charles K. Stein Coram, New York, U.S. I am the sole Democrat where I work. All of us are devoutly Christian and love one another. As Oregonians, we were able to cast...
...audience-came onstage and said entertainers like Goldberg represented "the heart and soul of America." He did not criticize the mayor of San Francisco when he broke the law to perform gay marriages. He condoned late-term abortions. He had nothing to say about Janet Jackson's Super Bowl breast flash. Unlike Al Gore, he did not even give a speech supporting faith-based social programs. To religious conservatives, he seemed a secular extremist. The Democrats have paid a heavy and honorable price for their support of equal rights-first for African Americans and now for homosexuals...
...Neither Yale nor Princeton is playing for an Ivy title [because they are not good at football], but plenty [a generous exaggeration] is on the line at Yale Bowl this Saturday in the nationally televised (YES Network, 4 p.m.) [and what percentage of the nation receives YES?] contest. In addition to pride [forever lost after losing to Cornell]…the heated rivalry and the fact that most Old Blue consider the Big Three the only games that really matter [easy to say when you’ve been eliminated from the Ivy title hunt for a good month...
Back in the dining hall, I eat my birthday dinner: a bean burrito and a bowl of pineapples. The birthday board mounted on the wall stares me down. I’m not alone in aging, but my housemates are turning 19 and 20. In college, which caters to the 18-21 set, I am, at 23, a grandfather...
It starts with Halloween and doesn't stop until New Year's--the end-of-the-year parade of holiday pies, cakes, cookies and other treats. From Thanksgiving to Super Bowl Sunday, the average American gains 5 to 7 lbs. This is a problem for all Americans--especially children, who are increasingly at risk for obesity and diabetes...