Word: chillness
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...furs with flowers, undergraduates in bearskin and coonskin greatcoats, graduates, many with wives, many with bright-eyed sons and daughters and grandchildren, all wearing crimson, most of them waving banners, giving forth the unforgettable scents of a great Eastern football classic-odor of healthy flesh nipped by late November chill, perfume of flowers, perfume of perfume, perfume of feminine hair, sharp tang of Egyptian cigarette fumes, clean breath of bourbon, smell of furs--chanting roar of cheers, of thousands of male voices raised in enthralled song, shrill feminine screams of sheer ecstasy...
...winning? Hitchens took an early lead. His wife Carol Blue (who is--surprise!--a Washington writer) offered an affidavit saying she was also at the lunch and backing her husband's account. And journalist Scott Armstrong signed a pro-Hitchens affidavit. Still, Hitchens is feeling a chill. "The Nation magazine," he says "has completely disowned me." And insider Washington is rejiggering its guest lists. "It nauseates me that it's come to who will or will not have me to dinner," sighs Hitchens. Most fun, of course, would be a dinner party with both disputants. Fox could broadcast it live...
...does Jerome Wagner, a 75-year-old former science teacher who shrugged off a 40-below chill factor to attend Ventura's swearing-in. "He's got the physical presence to take the two little guys next to him and say, 'Hey, could you guys stop this? Let's go down the middle of the road...
...like the rest of us, you've slept in, lost your temper and scarfed down the cookies. So now, like millions of other Americans, you have made yet another New Year's resolution to drop a few pounds, exercise more, drink less, stop smoking or just plain chill out. It won't be easy. In fact, you may have already broken the resolution you made last week. But if you're willing to try again, here's a list of tips to improve your chances of success...
Schiliro, who's now running the FBI's investigation of the Africa bombings, remembers feeling a chill run through his body. His fellow agents had already discovered that the terrorist now had the cash to back up his threat. Yousef apparently had a benefactor, a wealthy Saudi expatriate named Osama bin Laden, who in the 1980s had bankrolled mujahedin guerrillas fighting the Soviets in Afghanistan and who had fled his Saudi homeland after he had been charged with inciting fundamentalist opposition to the country's royal family...