Word: toe
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...Happy Days' Erin Moran, The Lost Boys' Corey Feldman, The Partridge Family's Danny Bonaduce, Eight Is Enough star Willie Aames and Diff'rent Strokes' Todd Bridges (all of whom cameo in the movie) participated in what is now a decades-long attempt to infuse excitement into tic-tac-toe. "They were all yelling out to each other whose band sucks. Because they're all in one," Spade says. "I walked out with a handful of CDs. I put them in a really special place." Although Feldman behaved a bit like he was still a child...
...really sad I didn't find it earlier in life." He'll climb again in September. Other common problems include back pain (from falls and carrying packs), pulled tendons and altitude-related infections. Then there are the more exotic ailments. Chuck Armatys, 52, lost the tip of his big toe summiting Everest and the end of his ring finger on Illampu, Bolivia, both from frostbite. "The things you lose in the mountains," he muses merrily...
...England to give up his post simply because he is gay. Even the leading Democratic candidates refuse to support equality in marriage. Senator John Kerry, who has no biological children with his current (second) wife, says marriage should be reserved for procreation, and, with few exceptions, the others toe that line too. And a new poll shows a drop in support for gay rights in the wake of the Supreme Court's decision against sodomy laws. Another cyclical backlash against gays--with echoes of the Anita Bryant campaign in the 1970s--looks quite possible...
...otherwise moribund economy. With even high-school girls able to afford a Louis Vuitton handbag, the cachet of haute couture is rapidly wearing off. "People in Japan no longer feel they have to prove they're rich by wearing expensive labels," says Takizawa, who himself rarely wears head-to-toe designer togs. "The whole ideology of fashion is becoming more inclusive...
...That follows an inconclusive first week of inquiry into the Administration's reading of the pre-war intelligence after which Senators concluded they needed to hear more. In a closed-door hearings last Thursday, the State Department officials hinted they felt pressure to toe the White House's hard line but insisted they had not tailored intelligence. Some observers, however, said such perceptions by officials at State - who were widely known as behind-the-scenes skeptics of the Iraq WMD intelligence - may simply have resulted from the at-times heated internal policy debate in the months leading...