Word: picked
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...adventure. Best way for a guy/girl to get your attention: Be bold. Like, punch-me-in-the-face bold. Where to find you on a Saturday night: Out. Possibly Blackout. First thing you notice about a guy/girl: That depends. Is it a guy or a girl? Your best pick-up line: Pick a number between 1 and 10...You lose! Take off your clothes. Best or worst lie you’ve ever told: I’m straight. Something you’ve always wanted to tell someone: I’m not as stupid as you look. Favorite...
What are folks doing with all the extra healthy years? Many are pursuing long-forgotten passions. Patrick Bookey, 57, of North Pole, Alaska, chucked a 25-year career as a high school music teacher to pick up woodworking, which he had enjoyed in grade school. So what if he makes half his old salary? "It's the most stress-relieving thing you can do," he says. "I absolutely love it. My wife has to come get me out of the shop in the evening...
...Astroturf, sending the ball into the Crimson offensive line and then bouncing into the hands of a Big Red defender, who returned it over 90 yards for the safety. It was the first in a series of late-half Harvard meltdowns—a Cornell touchdown, a Pizzotti pick, and a Big Red field goal all in the last 2:24 of the second quarter—that gave Cornell a surge of momentum heading into the intermission.“You block the extra point, pick it up, run it back, and now you think you?...
...Cunanan did, Reyes hides in plain sight in Miami, where he chats with a bartender and tries to pick up an older man in full view of his most-wanted poster. As the national media grows obsessed with the manhunt, Reyes begins phoning a tabloid reporter following his story, desperately trying to take control of his own image. "I'm a sympathetic subject," he tells her. "Brilliant. Good-looking. So you let me tell you how it's going down." The tabloid reporter ends the show with a monologue about writing a bestseller entitled Most Wanted which she describes...
...this grim economic news represents Sarkozy's return to hard reality, where essentials won't turn around and pick up with a rousing performance or deft spin of events," says Dominique Reynié, a political analyst at the Foundation of Political Sciences in Paris. "His initial successes involved passing tougher immigration law, opening up cabinet posts to leftist politicians, raising France's profile in international affairs - all things that produce big headlines, but whose real impact are hard to measure. And with economic worries now overtaking that earlier buzz, I think it's fair to say Sarkozy has failed...