Word: rounded
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...convoy of cars on a fund-raising drive for Camp Quality, the children's cancer charity. The 18-year-old, who's worked in the roadhouse bar since graduating from boarding school in Brisbane last November, makes almost weekly visits to Katherine, often covering the 600-km round trip in a day. "I love seeing my friends and going to the races," she says. "I'm a big social butterfly...
...friendly, round-faced Walshe isn't someone you'll glimpse on one of Church's tours. Based in the bowels of the soon-to-be-demolished Olympic Stand, among shelves full of leather-bound books and a wall of two-way radios, it's Walshe on Monday mornings who activates the M.C.G. machine. The dusty books contain handwritten facts and figures about M.C.G. attendances going back to 1921; Walshe computerized this information during the '90s and continues to update it. By cross-referencing factors such as which teams are playing, their positions on the ladder, whether they're last-start...
...team that's willing to win." (As opposed to all those fools who think the point is to lose.) So, in a power-sapping trade, the Lakers let O'Neal go in return for three Heat starters--Lamar Odom, Brian Grant and Caron Butler--plus a future first-round draft pick. The Lakers did manage to hang on to guard and persistent O'Neal rival Kobe Bryant, whose sexual-assault trial begins in August. What's sports lingo for Pyrrhic victory...
WITH ALL THE INDEPENDENT ORGANIZATIONS SPRINGING UP TO CIRCUMVENT THE MCCAIN-FEINGOLD CAMPAIGN-FINANCE LAW, DO WE NEED ANOTHER ROUND OF REFORMS? No. We only need a Federal Election Commission [FEC] to enforce the existing law. A lot of good things have happened since the law was passedincluding dramatic increases in small donors. But the Federal Election Commission simply fails to do its job. We're going to have to reform...
...employees to an outdoor barbecue of grilled pork and bowls of fiery red kimchi. "Great people! Great company!" he barks. "Great company! Great company!" they chant back, pumping their fists in perfect unison. Kim downs the soju in one gulp, then marches off to another table for another round of soju and another cheer. Then another, and another. Eight tables and countless cups later, he is red faced, still screaming chants and bear-hugging an unfortunate reporter. When dancing girls in short skirts and blond wigs start jiggling to ear-numbing Korean pop music, the tireless Kim, 59, cavorts...