Word: visitores
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...flourishes in part because much of the area is relatively virgin territory for the rich. "It's no longer pleasant to go to the South of France," sniffs one visitor. "It's so inundated, the pleasure is gone. Life in Southern California revolves around private homes and backyard swimming pools. They've overcasualized; there's almost an absence of tone." Says Helen Boehm, president of the porcelain company that bears her name: "I've been all over the world, and this place has glamour, color and manicure." Boehm (rhymes with dream) saw her very...
...visitor rather than a permanent member of the faculty. I suggest that the University should recognize that the School of Public Health, its academic leadership, its faculty, and its students are wonderful and exciting assets which should be treasured rather than tarnished. Alfred Gellhorn, M.D. Visiting Professor Chairman, Committee on Community Health
While my heart momentarily stops beating whenever a visitor expresses interest in one of my beloved books, I still continue to lend and share with others. Sometimes the books do come back to you, even if by accident. Once I lent a book to a friend who then lent it to someone else. Two years later I chanced upon it in the house of another friend, who thoughtfully asked me if I would like to borrow it. I told her yes, and brought it home...
...visitor from Washington who has been swallowed up for a few hours in this cobalt fantasy world, the 14 officers and 115 men of the U.S.S. Atlanta-also known as SSN 712-seem to be the only collection of Americans not complaining, or demanding some thing from their Government. They are serving their country, and serving it well...
...Ueno Zoo, the Emperor dropped in on a special, eight-month-old friend-her parents were a gift from former President Gerald R. Ford during Hirohito's state visit to the U.S. in 1975. But Japan's most famous young bird seemed unimpressed with her imperial visitor. Hoping to change the fowl's nonchalance, Hirohito studied the crane avidly, then moved in to try his hand at feeding. Still no recognition, but the Emperor was not about to create a flap. For the 80-year-old Hirohito, the bird's mere existence may carry more import...