Word: youngsters
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...Tale of the Bones Personal experience as a Japanese American has always led me to believe early man in America came from Asia, as one theory posits in your story "Who Were the First Americans?" [March 13]. As a youngster I saw a picture of an Eskimo girl in a book, and my younger sister looked like her twin. When I flew into Buffalo, New York, on business, the cabdriver who picked me up thought I was from the Indian reservation up the river. When I was relocating my family from one Chicago suburb to another, a moving-company worker...
Personal experience as a Japanese American has always led me to believe early man in America came from Asia, as one theory posits in your story "Who Were the First Americans?" [March 13]. As a youngster I saw a picture of an Eskimo girl in a book, and my younger sister looked like her twin. When I flew into Buffalo, N.Y., on business, the cabdriver who picked me up thought I was from the Indian reservation up the river. When I was relocating my family from one Chicago suburb to another, a moving-company worker appeared to be Japanese American...
...says Schwartze. “But Gloria Estefan co-wrote that.” No she did not. 4) Annie The Musical—“It’s the Hard-Knock Life” “I appeared in Annie as a youngster. The musical, not the movie.” 5) AZN—“Asian Pride” Schwartze, a Catholic caucasian, explains that “I live with two Asians. Also I belong to the AACF (Asian American Christian Fellowship).” 6) “Blues Clues Theme...
...power play going. We couldn’t get loose from them. They’re a good penalty kill team, very speedy.”Harvard, however, was fortified by a more comfortable and cohesive back line and some truly heady play in net by Martin. The youngster, who learned she would get her third collegiate start on Wednesday, was nimble with the glove, corralled rebounds, and dove fearlessly to knock away loose pucks despite being the only goalie listed on the game-time roster. Martin “gave us everything,” Stone said...
...often depicted hard at work--can't paint fast enough to stay ahead of the reader. So a cartoon stand-in for Lendler keeps turning up to urge the reader to slow down for Ned's sake and to please, please not turn the page yet. Now, what youngster can resist defying such a request? The narrative, a standard knight-rescuing-an-imprisoned-princess tale, unravels ridiculously as the overwhelmed Ned is forced to improvise. Tutus are substituted for missing armor, a giant pretzel replaces a dragon, and the hero falls through a hole in a half-drawn floor. Ultimately...