Word: knowingly
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Dates: during 1980-1980
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...have read Games for the Superintelligent. You probably have seen him on one of those American Express "You don't recognize me, but you will when you see my name" commercials. Whatever your previous acquaintance with James F. "Jim" Fixx, you know he is America's best-known preacher of the gospel of running. He has presented the swelling ranks of runners with a sequel to The Complete Book of Running (which, he acknowledges in the foreword to Jim Fixx's Second Book of Running, may have been titled a touch presumptuously...
...columnist for the Washington Post. This interview conducted by Scott A. Rosenberg. we've ever had, he may be pretty terrible, but he's trying hard. He's a good man, he's decent, and so forth. I think that's what's happening, I don't know. But it's eerie, it's extraordinary...
...international editions of Reader's Digest. There are numerous factual errors; on a list of obstacles that stand between the candidates and the conventions, Bakshian overlooks the New York primary. Where Bakshian is at his best--conversational, witty, on target--he is quoting liberally from people who really know their stuff and adding in analysis that, given two months and a large contract, anybody could have thought...
...Meisel and O'Hana, the program is just as successful. "At first I was scared. I didn't know how to deal with the kids or if they would like us or Harvard," O'Hana said...
...minority politics, necessitating a change in the Constitution, which Toffler chummily outlines in a letter addressed to "The Founding Parents." The new race will get more of its information from video screens and disks and terminals, perhaps explaining Toffler's rush to get in print while people still know how to read. Illiteracy may not turn out to be that bad, he predicts, in a world linked by voice-activated computers and "programmed walls." In fact, if Toffler's book is any indication of the next wave of literature, the change might well be salutary...