| Dear Andrew 1218:
Thank you. Thank you for inviting me. It's been a little while since I've had the honor of addressing you, and I appreciate very much your courtesy to me today. We should do this more often. I hope you will pardon my absence last year, and understand that I intended no personal insult to any of you. I was merely pre-occupied with the business of trying to escape the distinction of pre-season frontrunner for the Republican nomination, which, I'm sure some of you observed, I managed to do in fairly short order. But, now, I again have the privilege of that distinction, and this time I would prefer to hold on to it for a while. I know I have a responsibility, if I am, as I hope to be, the Republican nominee for President, to unite the party and prepare for the great contest in November.
Thursday August 30
Film studios that once turned out prize-winning movies now churn out video clips and television cop shows." But is it all bad news? The New York Times 08/20/01 (one-time registration required for access) Sunday August 19 HOW TO END: "While great endings have always been the exception, not the rule, they seem on the verge of extinction in today's pop-culture marketplace. That's because great endings require a lot of things that aren't fashionable in this age of flash and spectacle. They're the culmination of ideas and emotions, of things that take time and energy, skill and inspiration to create. In other words, there are no shortcuts." Dallas Morning News 08/19/01 Thursday August 16 I WANNA SEE MICKEY. IN COURT: The owners of the commercial rights to Winnie the Pooh (acquired in 1926) are suing Walt Disney for $35 million.
Togo star handed new Aston Villa deal
The move allows the 24-year-old midfielder time to build on some impressive displays for the reserves so far this season. Manager Martin O'Neill told the Birmingham Mail: "We are taking him on for the extra season so he is here for another 18 months. "He has been a wee bit unlucky because just when he was forcing his way in he hurt his knee again but he is okay now. "He played for the reserves the other night and did fine and he has been playing very well." Story by Alex Wolstenholme for FansFC Comments? Mail fansfceditor@googlemail.com .
Suggest ways to put the economy back on track?
So that cars will be bought. So that people will borrow at cheaper rates and have ability to pay it back. So that people can use the interest they save to have more buying power. So that corporations and small businesses do not think only the banks want to make profits. Economic 101. .
Prep Football: North Lincoln 21, Salisbury 14
Ford reached the end zone on a 4-yard pass from Ali with 1:24 left, and Martin Hosch-Cathcart recovered a perfectly executed onside kick from Salisbury's Frankie Cardelle. The third-seeded Hornets (9-4) possessed all three of their timeouts as they started their final drive at North Lincoln's 47-yard line, but cornerback Chad Arndt intercepted a second-down pass at the 19. "It gave us a lot of momentum every time we scored," Ford said. "We've been down in some situations, and we felt like we could come back." Salisbury moved to North Lincoln's 2 on the first possession of the third quarter thanks to a 21-yard, fourth-down reception by Josh Hunter, but a pass to Hunter on fourth-and-goal from the 12 gained only 5 yards. Ford's 20-yard touchdown run on a fourth-and-4 play helped trim North Lincoln's lead to 14-7 with 9:41 left in the game.
Miracle kid who owes his life to city medics
However, against all the odds he survived four or five days of chemotherapy every week for nine months, during which time he barely left the hospital. Dr Wallace called him his "miracle kid". Undergoing such treatment has left Joshua with severe kidney and stomach problems that have already required one major operation and will need more. He is desperate for services to remain in Edinburgh. Gaynor added: "The hospital means the world to us." .
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International Bowl inspires unique breed of fans
You would have thought their older brothers played at Rutgers. Or perhaps they were somehow related to Scarlet Knights coach Greg Schiano. But no, the six teenagers from Buffalo, N.Y., (Williamsville East High School) were merely International Bowl fans. Yes, I said International Bowl fans. A year ago, when the inaugural game was played here at Rogers Centre, the group drove up from Buffalo and randomly went all-out in their undying support for the Cincinnati Bearcats, painting their chests, dying their hair and doing everything they could to cheer Cincinnati on to a 27-24 victory over Western Michigan. Their theatrics even made their way onto the promotional video that runs on the International Bowl Web site. After the two teams were announced this year, they decided they were going to cheer for Rutgers.
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