Word: smells
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...worry. That peculiar odor you have been noticing in the morning is not burning toast. It is the smell of panic -- plump and juicy egos sizzling on a very hot griddle -- at NBC's Today show. Since the end of December, when Deborah Norville replaced Jane Pauley as co-host, ratings have not merely dropped; they have gone into free fall, a dizzying decline of nearly 25% that translates into approximately 920,000 lost households. The No. 1 morning program only five months ago, Today is now a distant No. 2, far behind ABC's Good Morning America...
...really all the blood on the gunshot victims, or the long wait for a doctor, or the smell of the street people that bothers patients in the / emergency room at Booth Memorial in Queens, N.Y. It's the indignity. "Forty- year-old people come in with terminal cancer, and this is where they die," says Dr. Mark Henry. "With the lights on, no privacy, no curtains, with their bedpans and medical charts in clear sight of other patients and their relatives forced to crowd around their gurney...
...produced by death-row inmates at the state prison in Huntsville. With Mattox and Richards set to face each other again in a runoff election in April, the issue is sure to loom large. "Maybe the next step will be scratch-and-sniff ads, so voters can sample the smell of the death chamber," complains Richards' campaign spokesman Mark McKinnon...
Storm rising -- political and natural. Bush can smell it and view it on every horizon. The old planet is sagging more than ever from its burdens of people and pollution, and it no longer takes a hydrologist or climatologist to detect it. Every American can see it in the air. You can stand with Nancy Reagan on the lawn of her sun-drenched Bel Air home above Beverly Hills and see a sinister tongue of smog lick out and engulf the office where her husband works just three miles below. Or you can walk along the low hills of North...
...Line service was suspended when the fire broke out, and was restored at about 4:20 p.m. More than 40 minutes after the fire, commuters in Harvard Square Station could still smell the fumes and see a haze of smoke hanging below the platform lights...