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Word: grins (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...will be able to reverse the tracheotomy and remove the breathing tube. In the meantime, Medicare has run out, and we're facing a $300-a-day bill for care. At times it seems the horrors will never stop. Then my dad will recognize me, smile an almost childish grin of delight when I say my name, and it all seems worth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: My Dad's Ronstadt Revival | 5/15/2000 | See Source »

...reporter made him use the E-word. "And I enthusiastically accept," said an overshadowed Bush from over McCain's shoulder, a little too loudly, maybe making a mental note to be a little more McCain-like with these reporter types from now on. Bush had brought along his cowboy grin, but it had a forced quality; he seemed painfully aware that this was McCain's show...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Backing Bush, McCain Mends Fences for 2004 | 5/9/2000 | See Source »

This spring's knock-down, drag-out, sticks-and-stones primary between George W. Bush and John McCain had to be the most high-profile, rancorous and riveting GOP battle in most party elephants' memory. Now it's Big Tent time, with the first of several planned grip-and-grin summits between the anointed and the heretic going down Tuesday in Pittsburgh. How do these two make it convincing? "They'll start by heaping praise on one another for the press, and will genially agree to disagree on whatever they have to," says TIME Washington correspondent James Carney. "McCain will...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can Bush-McCain Summit Look Like a Love-In? | 5/8/2000 | See Source »

...Richard S. Lee ’01, a social studies concentrator in Pforzheimer House, is Editorial Chair of The Crimson. His slapshot, clocked at 53 miles-per-hour, is pretty damn worthless, but his toothless grin is guaranteed, someday, to win the heart of some lucky canuck lass...

Author: By Richard S. Lee, | Title: Fifteen Minutes: Putting Romance on Ice | 4/27/2000 | See Source »

...cheek stoicism, "I'm sixty-seven/and have high blood pressure,/and probably shouldn't/be doing speed at all." When a male acquaintance appears at his door, disheveled and asking for a night's rest, the inquiring poet notes: "You don't feel anecdotal,/Give me a weary grin, And eat three plates of Total." Seeing a renowned bar brawler in his decline, Gunn calls him "a shabby old tabby." That description does not fit the poet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Poems of Love And Death | 4/24/2000 | See Source »

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