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Word: cereality (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...early morning quick-starter. An afternoon snack. The only viable option to baked ziti. There's probably only one food that everyone can count on for their nutriment needs: cereal. Every dining hall serves it, but do all Harvard students nosh on the same grains? As evidenced by the empty boxes in various houses, the answer to that would have to be no. Some results of an informal poll...

Author: By Elisabeth A. Mayer, | Title: Cereal Survey: How's Trix? | 11/18/1993 | See Source »

...Union: Not only do first-years have to wait on long lines to dine in this stellar establishment, but they also suffer through a less than impressive array of breakfast cereal; nine types were noted. The most popular types appeared to be the perennial favorite sugary-sweet Lucky Charms and Frosted Flakes. Perfect for providing the rush of energy needed to stay awake during Chem 5 and Math...

Author: By Elisabeth A. Mayer, | Title: Cereal Survey: How's Trix? | 11/18/1993 | See Source »

...appeal is universal; observe the diversity--yardlings' arms' laden with corn tortillas, salsa and soda; an older gentleman carrying a quart of milk and cereal; a German couple juggling "gourmet" deli sandwiches (chicken salad and ham and cheese); a semi-punk, white-faced crowd waiting on a pack of Marlboros and Lindt chocolate bars...

Author: By Sonna Moon, | Title: At Your Convenience | 10/28/1993 | See Source »

Over in the cereal aisle two students toss each other bottles of gatorade. In the doorway, a balding man scratches at his lotto ticket, breath held in suspended anticipation. Robert places a black, plastic bucket upside down in front of one of the registers. It reads, "CLOSED," scrawled in black and orange ink across its belly (Halloween colors). The lines have disappered: the store grows suddenly quiet. Robert and Bonnie relax. Their shift only half-over, they wait casually for the next rush...

Author: By Sonna Moon, | Title: At Your Convenience | 10/28/1993 | See Source »

...view because in the end what was revolutionary about Michael Jordan was not what he accomplished on the court but what he achieved off it. Jordan earned $4 million a year putting a ball through a hoop, but he made about eight times that for selling sneakers, cars, cola, cereal, hamburgers and underwear. In the past few years he was not a basketball star who played at business but a businessman who played basketball. His leaping, legs-splayed silhouette became as famous around the world as the large-eared shadow of another corporate and entertainment icon, Mickey Mouse. Until Jordan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: I'll Fly Away | 10/18/1993 | See Source »

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