Word: ideality
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...Tokyo with dreams of singing and acting. After auditioning for a role in a movie about male hosts, he decided he could be one himself. Though top hosts can earn well into six figures, Tanaka is happy with $3,000 a month and an audition-friendly schedule. "It's ideal, except for one thing," he says. "I can't tell my parents...
Bangalore has been many things in its 500-year history, but its most recent incarnation as a trendy town on the move makes India's fifth-largest city the ideal locale for a subcontinental pub crawl. Once a small protectorate of the Mysore Raj, Bangalore is now the fastest-growing metropolis in India. The meteoric rise of the city's I.T. industry earned it the moniker the Silicon Valley of Asia. Lifetime residents, however, know it as the Garden City, where lush forests and endless blossoms of golden and pink acacias dot with shimmering color even the grimiest roads...
From Cosmo Village, take a quick walk to Pub World on 65 Residency Road, an aptly named bar where foreigners seem to outnumber the locals. It's an ideal place for thirsty travelers, who can easily strike up a conversation with just about anyone sitting around. But don't expect an array of international ales; only local brews Kingfisher...
...visiting friends, everyone is home over Harvard's winter break. But if that's not enough time, then invite friends to come see you during reading period. Without classes or tests, it is an ideal time for visitors. And intercession offers a perfect opportunity to return the favor and travel to see high school buddies at their colleges...
...little old-fashioned. I think there ought to be some congruence between one's public life and one's private life. Obviously, the ideal would be if a president were a paragon of virtue in public and in private. (See George Washington as the prototype.) I also believe that one's private conduct is a useful and important measure of one's public character. Washington would have agreed. I suspect he would have regarded Clinton's lack of control in private as an ominous indicator for his public behavior as president...