Word: relishingly
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...Tapas is being naturalized," says the trim-bearded, tall-toqued chef. "We include many non-Spanish dishes. Anything that suits the idea." He cites such Italian entries as pasta, salads of mozzarella, basil and tomato, and caponata, the Sicilian eggplant relish. Add to that the steak tartare, fish chowder and salmon with aquavit and dill served at the Tapas Restaurant located in north Cambridge, Mass., and it is clear that tapas have be come all-around citizens of the world...
When immigrants came to this country in search of success, often their first desire was to see their children educated. Overwhelmed by the abundance of schools in this country compared to elsewhere, the opportunity for most to receive an education, immigrants relish the chance to see their children attend any university. But Harvard University, whose 350th birthday party begins in August, is still somehow special among all those schools...
Such are the stars of Spitting Image, the British television program in which some 400 latex and foam-rubber puppets reduce the antics of the powerful to a mess of funny faces, pratfalls and spasmodic jerks. Breaking satirical ground and television rules with equal relish, the weekly show regularly strings along almost one in every four British men, women and children...
Marcos may not relish his new legal status, but as a lawyer, he is interested. His chief Washington attorney, Stanton Anderson, describes him as "shocked by the cost of litigation" but also "fascinated by the legal issues." In his rented beachfront house in Honolulu, he told the New York Times last week that his days are now consumed by consultations with lawyers. "I intend to vindicate myself within my lifetime," he vowed. It remains to be seen whether a lifetime will be long enough...
This is a juicy subject for the nation's best-known conservative writer. With considerable relish and fluent wit, Buckley stirs a plot involving the treasonous activities of Britain's leading scientist and the Soviet-bred daughter of an American journalist. The amiable Oakes frequently gets lost in the flashbacks and Kremlinology, but that is to be expected. Buckley's bad guys always get more attention than his good guys...