Word: font
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...falls from severed hands, and Butler performs parlor tricks if you’re intuitive enough to click on him at the right time. You can even indulge in a bizarre form of karaoke by moving the cursor over Win’s face—words in spidery font form in puffs of black smoke. Though these extras can be distracting, viewers might actually appreciate the music once they get past the initial “Coooool!” The band’s usual hurdy-gurdies, French horns, and mandolins have all been left at home. This...
...font-family: arial; font-size: 12px; text-align: left; } #305 { width: 425px; } .titlerow-a { background-color: #cc0000; float: left; width: 30px; font-weight: bold; padding-left: 5px; color:#fff;} .titlerow-b { background-color: #cc0000; float: left; width: 125px; text-align: left; font-weight: bold; padding-left: 5px;color:#fff;} .titlerow-c { background-color: #cc0000; float: left; width: 95px; text-align: left;font-weight: bold; padding-left: 5px;color:#fff;} .titlerow-d { background-color: #cc0000; float: left; width: 65px; text-align: left;font-weight: bold; padding-left: 5px;color:#fff;} .titlerow-e { background-color: #cc0000; float: left; width: 65px; text-align...
...display:block; font-size:1.5em; } Battle at Kruger This page is enhanced with Flash. Click Here to Upgrade your Flash Player...
...font of this friendly, funky vibe is Lasseter, the jolly round fellow (any cartoonist could draw him in two seconds and three circles) with a weakness for assaultively colorful Hawaiian shirts. In the mid-'80s, this Disney renegade began making computer-animated shorts, one of which, Tin Toy, won an Oscar six years before he finished Pixar's first feature, 1995's Toy Story. That movie changed animation history, as Walt Disney had in 1937 with Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Like Walt in his early genius period, Lasseter saw that the secret of an animated movie is story...
...many recent vets simply aren't prepared or equipped for the real-world job hunt. At Military.com's career fair, some job seekers' business cards bore nine-digit phone numbers and incorrectly written e-mail addresses. One vet had a two-page résumé in a complicated font, its objective reading, "to display extensive job skills." Some struggled visibly with etiquette, lurking far from the booths, sneaking up only to grab a brochure. Many, including Hughes, left the Chicago hotel entirely uncertain about their prospects...