Word: junkings
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Charles certainly makes up for these shortcomings later in life—for the most part. He drops the junk and becomes quite the civil rights advocate, but he still womanizes heavily, fathering five (some sources say seven) children with other women while still married. However, the film tries to explain his foibles through overdone flashbacks that are peppered haphazardly throughout the film. It’s as if Hackford doesn’t trust us enough to make sense of things on our own, offering us visually tacky psychologically explanatory sequences that retard the tone and tenor...
...Somewhere along the line, your e-mail In box started to look like your real mailbox-full of unwanted ads and "free" offers that somehow aren't. New spam-filtering software may have helped cut back on the lewdness, but those programs sometimes drop good friends in the junk folder. DigiPortal's ChoiceMail ($40 at digiportal.com; a scaled-down free version is also available) gets around that problem by checking IDs at the door to your In box. If the message is from someone already in your address book, the mail goes through, but if it's from an unknown...
...debate over the respective values of Ben Affleck and Matt Damon, Class of 1992—which is more talented, more bankable, more prone to some serious junk in the trunk—is one that will rage on until the two are starring in modern retellings of Out to Sea. Their stars have alternately shone and dimmed, based largely on whether their last hit was a Bourne Supremacy or an All the Pretty Horses, an Armageddon or a Paycheck. But regardless of their individual successes, it’s difficult to discuss one without mentioning the other...
...whereas both Reid and junior lightweight rower Jonah Todd-Geddes say that dieting isn’t really that bad, Reid says that he does miss his old junk food habits...
...wonder Somewhere along the line, your e-mail In box started to look like your real mailbox - full of unwanted ads and "free" offers that somehow aren't. New spam-filtering software may have helped cut back on the lewdness, but those programs sometimes drop good friends in the junk folder. DigiPortal's ChoiceMail ($40 at digiportal.com; a scaled-down free version is also available) gets around that problem by checking IDs at the door to your In box. If the message is from someone already in your address book, the mail goes through, but if it's from...