Word: fines
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Koppel was 4-for-8 on the afternoon with two RBI as the Crimson overcame a pair of home runs by B.C. junior Chris Vicari, one in each game. Harvard co-captain Deborah Abeles had another fine afternoon at the plate, going 5-for-7 with two RBI, and co-captain Terri Teller and sophomore catcher Mairead McKendry each had a multi-hit game...
...time-pressured FM crucible revives memories of a more leisurely paced spring break. Last Friday, four friends and I disembarked in Lisbon, without any Portuguese language skills to speak of. A day later, a fine bartender murmured something about time changing for the reason his club wasn t booming. So back we wound, without even a thought. It was only two days later, when trying to catch a train to a nearby town that we noticed that all of the trains were leaving two hours later. Hmmm. And then, like the final scene in >=The Usual Suspects,=wrong,=that clock...
Kids develop the darnedest eating habits. You've heard of the purity rule: potatoes and carrots must never touch, or they're "contaminated." Or the idea that any food is fine as long as it's peanut butter. I've even heard of youngsters who won't eat vegetables except in Chinese restaurants. But that hasn't stopped the experts at the U.S. Department of Agriculture from coming up with a new set of guidelines, published last week in the form of a pint-size food pyramid, to help parents and teachers encourage kids to eat a healthy, balanced diet...
George W. Bush looks like the most promising reason in decades for the majority of people to say yes [NATION, March 15]. Serious grumblers and potential voters across the political spectrum may begin to overlook party affiliation and fine points on issues and instead look for the candidate with other salient qualities. Governor Bush appears presidential! After a little time with Bush in the White House, people might again start hoping their own child would grow up to be President! MERL KUHLMAN Goshen...
...around the globe for Clinton to overcome his instinct not to use force at all. The dovish part of the President, his make-love-not-war part, is so deeply ingrained that his advisers no longer bother to deny it. He really believes that we all could get along fine if only he were around to lead us in a big conflict-resolution workshop. He normally keeps that stuff under wraps, but it was on display last Tuesday in a mostly ad-libbed speech at a conference of government unions. "I want us to live in a world," he said...