Word: colors
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...font-family: arial; font-size: 12px; text-align: left; } #305 { width: 525px; } .titlerow-a { background-color: #cc0000; float: left; width: 28px; font-weight: bold; padding-left: 0px; color:#fff;} .titlerow-b { background-color: #cc0000; float: left; width: 240px; text-align: left; font-weight: bold; padding-left: 1px;color:#fff;} .titlerow-c { background-color: #cc0000; float: left; width: 81px; text-align: left;font-weight: bold; padding-left: 1px;color:#fff;} .titlerow-d { background-color: #cc0000; float: left; width: 77px; text-align: left;font-weight: bold; padding-left: 1px;color:#fff;} .titlerow-e { background-color: #cc0000; float: left; width: 85px; text-align...
...mountaintop] with you, but I want you to know tonight that we as a people will get to the promised land." On election night we watched as Americans from Virginia, the capital of the Confederacy, to California voted for a President based not on the color of his skin but on the content of his character. Now we know what Dr. King saw from the mountaintop. We have overcome. Today. Alan B. Posner, Royal Oak, Michigan...
...want you to know tonight that we as a people will get to the promised land" [Nov. 17]. On election night we watched as Americans from Virginia, home of the capital of the Confederacy, to California voted for a President not on the basis of the color of his skin but on the content of his character. Now we know what King saw from the mountaintop. We have overcome. Alan B. Posner, ROYAL OAK, MICH...
When you've found fame and fortune for having a blue head, it can be tricky to figure out your next career move. The obvious avenues--opening a chain of blue-food restaurants or being the second person of color to be elected President--present significant obstacles. And aside from Braveheart and some of Picasso's girlfriends, there just aren't that many blue role models...
...sound like a theme park, but the founders worked closely with education experts, including British creativity guru Sir Ken Robinson and UCLA's Daniel Siegel, to create the curriculum. Questions like HOW DO 4-YEAR-OLDS UNDERSTAND THE COLOR RED? are written on pieces of paper stuck to the classroom walls. Learning is to be provoked, not imposed. Teachers talk approvingly of "fun provocation going on in the 3s." Simko describes her job as leading students into a series of questions that will guide the curriculum. "It doesn't suit everybody," she says of the methodology, "but every school should...