Word: jungly
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...Cumberland, Va., who recently helped disband her other church: "When you have a congregation that's historically been able to survive at 20 members and loses 12, they close." And for the first time in American history, the majority of seminarians don't come from rural areas. Shannon Jung, a rural-church expert in Kansas City, Mo., says of young pastors, "A town without a Starbucks scares them." Wolpert recalls a professor's warning to a promising seminarian to shun a rural call: "Don't go. You're too creative for that...
...you’re just looking at it like just another day of practices,” Christensen said. “It was good practice for everybody. It just worked out for me to get a high mark with the short approach.” Newcomer Stacey Jung placed eighth in the pole vault with her 3.05-meter clearance, while sophomore Paige Martin and freshman Christine Reed finished back-to-back at 14 and 15 with clearances of 2.90 and 2.75 meters, respectively.Bounding 5.66 meters in the long jump, senior Brittan Smith was the top collegian in the finals...
...need we outgrow. Over the course of his life and travels, Freud acquired more than 2,000 statues, vases and terra-cottas, plus some phalluses, of which his favorites stood in a row on his desk. "I must always have an object to love," he confessed to Carl Jung...
...Asia's crisis holds lessons for today. Most important: leadership matters. Notably, South Korea came out of the crisis far stronger than when it went in. Like in the U.S. today, the crisis swept through the country during a presidential election campaign. Kim Dae Jung, a longtime dissident who ran on a left-leaning economic platform, rocked markets with the suggestion that he might repudiate an International Monetary Fund (IMF) rescue plan. But after he was elected, he not only signed up for a $57 billion IMF package, he embraced even more sweeping reforms than the IMF called...
...Cultural Revolution, by contrast, looks like a dinner party. Yet the country's appalling record on missile and weapons proliferation, its illegal-drug sales and counterfeiting and its abysmal human-rights record here are implicitly just the antics of a misunderstood regime. Pyongyang's extortionate tactics with Kim Dae Jung, the South Korean leader who tried to coax it out of isolation, are also glossed over. In Chinoy's zeal to castigate the neocons, there is a subtle subtext that the North is a more or less normal country being prevented by silly U.S. policies from coming...