Word: glennon
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Like his father and grandfather before him, Donal Glennon has worked for Guinness all his life. He started at 16, as a messenger at the landmark St. James's Gate brewery in Dublin, and today, at 51, he's an accomplished brewer. His family ties to the beermaker stretch back nearly a century, to the days when 1 out of every 10 Dubliners either worked for Guinness or was supported by someone who did. The company was a classic paternalistic employer: it built affordable housing for its workers, and provided pensions, health care and education benefits long before they were...
...shot from the side blocked by Germain. Corriero shot the bouncing rebound again—with the puck flying up in the air, over Germain, and landing right on Brown’s goal line. But before the referees called a goal, in swooped Lindsey Glennon to save the day—only to find Harvard freshman Jennifer Sifers who passed off to free Ruggiero on the right side of the net for an easy open wrister. Ninety minutes later, the Crimson put through its second score of the day, capping an emotionally and physically exhausting affair that brought them...
...first Brown goal came from the Bears’ third line as winger Lindsey Glennon wrapped around the back of the net unchallenged for the initial shot, and winger Jenny Rice poked the puck home on the ensuing scramble...
...many teens, vegetarianism is a passionately felt moral imperative. Says high school senior Claire Leavitt, 17, who spit out meat as an infant: "Animals are a part of nature, and we can live without killing them for our taste buds." Lorraine Glennon, Claire's mom and a magazine editor in New York City, eventually went veggie too. "After a while I realized I had no good answer for the question 'How can you eat animals?'" says Glennon. Riva Detweiler, a 12-year-old from Lexington, Mass., who occasionally eats chicken, says she started to connect meat eating to killing animals...
...course, the traditional virtues come wrapped in the garb of the less than traditional 1990s, when prosperity is at an all-time high and leisure at an all-time low. In the Glennon household in Lake Forest, Ill., parents John and Kathy and their three younger daughters have re-arranged family life around the hockey schedule of son Nick, 10. One week's lineup: Sunday: practice from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. Monday: power skating from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday: game night. Friday: a fund-raising dinner dance for the team. Sunday: another game. And several days...