Word: feed
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Every morning at 5, Barb Bakshis chugs some coffee and feeds her animals--including 30 sheep, 14 chickens and a horse--before slipping on heels and heading to the bank she co-owns. After work, she and husband Mike Zang, a 54-year-old boat salesman, stay up late doing chores on their 150-acre farm in Burlington, Wis. "Yes, I do this for enjoyment," says Bakshis, 43, and laughs. Former suburbanites, the couple bought their century-old farm in 1993 and are learning as they go. When they have questions about lamb birthing, they call their neighbors. And when...
...program is being run much like a college alumni operation. Pentagon officials tell TIME that a database is being set up to keep track of the foreign military students after they return. Websites and e-mail networks are being constructed to feed them U.S. policy papers. And the Pentagon hopes to organize get-togethers at which alumni meet top U.S. officials such as the secretaries of Defense or State in countries where they are traveling. The cultivating has to be done carefully. Some foreign officers have been ostracized by their militaries for pushing the U.S. line too hard at home...
...Harvard answered back with two goals of its own to once again tie up the score at 4-4. Scholl scored his second goal of the game off a feed from sophomore midfielder Brian Mahler. Junior midfielder Tom Boylan added an unassisted goal to once again bring the Crimson close...
...evidence available, including some cutting-edge research, and also have many women talking about their experiences. So in the chapter on efficiency, which is titled "How Necessity Is the Mother of Multitasking," I interview a corporate executive who found herself with triplets and had to learn quickly how to feed them all at once so she could take a nap. In the chapter on coping with stress, I talk about how new mothers tend to make extraordinary kinds of friendships, based on their deep need for other people. I found this to be true in my own life and only...
...lack of transportation and food for troops. Many African countries have 70 to 80 percent of their populations living on less than a dollar a day; while they may be willing to send troops, they cannot afford the five dollars a day required to clothe, house, feed and arm a soldier, especially one on a mission with no profit for the country. Thus, nations have donated troops, but they are ill-equipped. Some have failed to reach Sudan because their countries cannot afford to fly them there...