Word: wraps
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...Faris in mind, and the now eighty year old Faris Ackil is a regular at the restaurant and a large part of b.good’s marketing campaign. B.good will be another addition to several fast food restaurants in Harvard Square. In close proximity to b.good are The Wrap, which specializes in burritos and smoothies, and Felipe’s Tacqueria, the owner of which is also currently constructing a nearby fast food diner. CEO and co-founder of The Wrap, John Pepper, said he is not concerned by any loss in market share to b.good...
...anger and ironies wrap around each other. By picking someone he knew so well, Bush hoped to avoid making the kind of miscalculation his father had made with David Souter, yet now he stands accused of doing just that. And by avoiding a costly fight with the left, Bush gets one with the right. Conservatives find themselves struggling with whether they really want to whack their President when he's already down and go on the record opposing a devout Evangelical whom he trusts completely. Fight him and lose, and they prove how powerless they are to affect much...
...that’s the beginning and the end: if you see something everyday it doesn’t mean you understand it. We start with the curiosity of a child—many times we failed, once in a while I succeed. Our contribution was merely to wrap our arms around and focus on the simplest aspects of the problem...
...York Times columnist David Brooks, who made a name for himself by pillorying the “liberal elite” on behalf of average Americans, does a great job looking at the middle class and seeing whatever he wants to see. In a wrap-up piece on the 2004 election, Brooks claims that 19 percent of wealthy voters can be classified in the liberal elite, while a mere 11 percent are “business-class conservatives.” I’m not sure how Brooks came up with this statistic, but, at best, it is horribly...
...filmmaker helming the first musical to be shot in mainland China for four decades. But nowadays only the biggest Asian movies seem to survive at the box office, so when the Hong Kong-based director sat down to plan his first Chinese film in years, he decided to wrap a small love story in a musical coat. "It was like the sugar that helps you draw the audience back into the theater," he says. "But I had no idea what it was going to look like...