Word: snows
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...Business in Harvard Square is generally not very good," said John Chaprales. "The winter [snow] was a very, very bad time...
...likes of Meet the Press and This Week with David Brinkley is harder than it looks. On the first show, Republican Congressman John Kasich was so bothered by feedback in his earpiece that he had to keep removing it to answer the questions. A week later, host Tony Snow kept referring to Labor Secretary Robert Reich as "Senator." Snow, a conservative newspaper columnist, is a competent but colorless interviewer, and the show is loaded with superfluous gimmicks (questions from viewers sent over the Internet; clips from old Fox Movietone newsreels). Overall, the program--forced to broadcast from various locations around...
...look back upon a year whose opening days of meeting roommates and hearing Dean of the Faculty Jeremy R. Knowles warn us to "beware of snow drops"--its meaning today eludes me--are as vivid as Friday's union demonstration, it is difficult not to sit back and try to fill in the gaps...
...some of it over the Bronx, and renew New York City? As it is, Yankee Stadium is one of the few places in the city where cultures and ages and incomes still mix. People who watched the Yankees' home opener on television three weeks ago marveled at the snow; people who were there marveled at the warmth...
...says a suit he filed last week against his old employer. That could amount to a Lion King's ransom, because Katzenberg's definition of profits includes much more than income from movie tickets. "By way of example," says the suit, "in 1994 Disney's video re-release of Snow White, an animated feature first released over 50 years earlier, generated gross revenues of some $800 million and profit of over $500 million...