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Word: cards (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


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Slate's Scott Shuger found that although USAT led with the schoolyard shooting in Arkansas, there was other news out there. The NYT led with a green-card snafu at INS, and WP and LAT went with President Clinton's sounded-awfully-like-an-apology-but-wasn't remarks in Uganda over how the U.S. "wronged" Africa with the slave trade. Apparently the comments were impromptu, and are giving aides fits...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cheap $late: In Today's 'In Today's Papers' | 3/25/1998 | See Source »

...anyone interested in Cannibal, South Park or other ideas he tried to develop with Parker and Stone, among them a TV series about two apes who hang upside down and sing. To help his proteges pay the rent, Graden hired Parker and Stone to make a video Christmas card...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Gross And Grosser | 3/23/1998 | See Source »

When I first heard that I had been Quadded one year ago, I insisted on reading the card myself. Amid screams of hysteria, someone asked my blockmate, "Where are we living next year?" to which my goofy but perceptive friend responded, "Stanford." The prospects were not good...

Author: By Joe E. Subotnik, | Title: So You've Been Exiled Up North? | 3/20/1998 | See Source »

...says it is noharder to change an E-ticket than a regularticket, since Delta requires its customers to makeboth paper and electronic changes in person at theairport. USAirways, however, simplifies thisprocess by allowing E-tickets to be changed overthe phone. The agent will require a confirmationnumber and a credit card number to guarantee thatthe customer is really who he or she claims...

Author: By Scott A. Penner, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: E-Tickets: Alternative For Airline Travel? | 3/17/1998 | See Source »

...yourself physically educated. Sure, you may be having fun. But you are also "enriching yourself," thus justifying such a significant expenditure of free time. Delightful as these activities may be, they are still useful, productive, or at the very least, "rewarding." They are not the same as, say, playing card games. Or going window-shopping. Or re-reading old mail. Or going for a walk--not jogging, not power-walking, but just a pointless walk. Or talking with friends in the dining hall for an extra two hours. Or reading Cosmopolitan. Or playing "Doom...

Author: By Dara Horn, | Title: Staring at the Ceiling | 3/17/1998 | See Source »

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