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Word: fasts (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Mendy also said she found her studies in Arabic to be “really fast-paced and intense but extremely rewarding...

Author: By Claire M. Guehenno, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Arabic Courses Draw Higher Enrollment | 10/5/2005 | See Source »

They found that the number of children who ate fast food between four and seven times per week more than doubled over the three-year period during which the study was conducted...

Author: By Adrian J. Smith, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Kids Eat More Fried Food | 10/5/2005 | See Source »

...West Belfast peace line, a barrier that has separated Catholic and Protestant neighborhoods longer than Berlin was divided by its wall. Their guide, Bren-dan McKernan, laced fact with a heavy dose of blarney. He recited the alphabet soup of Irish paramilitary groups just as the bus passed a fast food restaurant. To the i.r.a., i.n.l.a., u.d.a. and u.v.f., he added kfc. "Their leader was known as the Colonel," he deadpanned. "They were responsible for a lot of stomach injuries." Another guide eases nerves by repeating that passengers have nothing to fear, then asks them to pick up their bulletproof...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Turning Tragedy Into a Tourist Industry | 10/4/2005 | See Source »

...still a fact of life for those in all but the most accepting industries and regions of the country. Moreover, discrimination based on gender identity/expression and sexual orientation disproportionately impacts queer Americans who are poor. So while McKinsey might be hosting BGLT recruiting sessions at Harvard, managers at fast-food restaurants may still be refusing to hire openly queer people. That’s what keeps the disproportionate percentage of impoverished queer Americans in poverty...

Author: By Michael A. Feldstein, | Title: FOCUS: The Biggest Barrier: Poverty by Intolerance | 10/3/2005 | See Source »

...cross from the outside was part of a Yale style of play that threw the Crimson for a loop. The Bulldogs played with their outside midfielders very wide, leaving room for the backs to come up the field. "They would just send more attackers up," Keeley said. "They played fast. They played quick." For a Harvard offense that usually pinches its midfield in toward the middle of the field, the adjustment to the outside was a tough one. "Yale played differently than anything we’d ever really seen," Odorczyk said. "We just got pulled out of shape really...

Author: By Carrie H. Petri, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Golden Goal Pushes Yale Past Harvard | 10/3/2005 | See Source »

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