Word: thirst
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...munched on the complimentary Alaskan wild salmon provided by the Klub. Members of the losing teams also enjoyed the festivities and post-race excitement. “It was definitely a great experience. I just wish I had 1,049 ounces of beer right now to quench my thirst,” added teammate Andrew E.F. Gordon...
...spent lots of time by himself, wandering the woods near his home. He didn't watch television because there wasn't one, which is generally coincident with not having electricity. That lifestyle was a choice made by his parents. His father Woody, a med-school dropout with no thirst for the professional life, found happiness working in the outdoors at a variety of hardscrabble jobs. His mother Jo worked at her father's sports camp. Miller has two sisters and one brother...
...Education organizes classes, seminars, speakers, and other opportunities for education in the community, and the Vice President of Shabbat and Holidays organizes holiday programming. These five positions are all elected. “My dream is to make students more involved with Hillel by giving them a new thirst for Jewish knowledge,” Ernst wrote in an e-mail. “I also hope to work towards Hillel’s mission of fostering a Jewish identity that students will be able to carry with them once they leave Harvard.” Greenberg explained that...
...viewpoint "Oil is Here to Stay," Peter Huber argues that sufficient supplies of oil exist to quench our thirst indefinitely and that we merely need the political will to extract them. His assessment implies that we should continue our addiction to using fossil fuels without fear of consequence. In fact, we are probably paying for that addiction right now in the form of global climate change. Evidence abounds that the earth is warming?melting ice caps, rising sea levels and perhaps even more intense hurricanes devastating our coasts. Most climate scientists believe the warming is directly related to rising concentrations...
...government does. Washington should do more, since the U.S. is responsible for some 25% of the world's fossil-fuel consumption and the corresponding pollution. Karl M. Ortner Vienna In his viewpoint "Oil Is Here To Stay," Peter Huber argues that sufficient supplies of oil exist to quench our thirst indefinitely and that we merely need the political will to extract them. His assessment implies that we should continue our addiction to using fossil fuels without fear of consequence. In fact, we are probably paying for that addiction right now in the form of global climate change. Evidence abounds that...