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Trump on Iran: From ‘very close’ to a deal to ‘very close’ to a bomb

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Style   来源:Columnists  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:“He’s special,” Mendoza said. “He’s getting ready to be the leadoff hitter for the Dodgers and four hours before the first pitch, he’s throwing 95, 96 (mph) with a split. He’s having fun. Yeah, that’s what the game needs, players like that. It’s just fun to be out there and watch him do his thing.”

“He’s special,” Mendoza said. “He’s getting ready to be the leadoff hitter for the Dodgers and four hours before the first pitch, he’s throwing 95, 96 (mph) with a split. He’s having fun. Yeah, that’s what the game needs, players like that. It’s just fun to be out there and watch him do his thing.”

This image released by Disney shows promotional art for “Lilo & Stitch.” (Disney via AP)This image released by Disney shows promotional art for “Lilo & Stitch.” (Disney via AP)

Trump on Iran: From ‘very close’ to a deal to ‘very close’ to a bomb

“Lilo & Stich” directorthinks the big screen experience remains important for young moviegoers.“I fell in love with the movies, seeing them in theaters as a kid,” he said. “I don’t think there’s yet any substitute for it.

Trump on Iran: From ‘very close’ to a deal to ‘very close’ to a bomb

For more coverage of this summer’s upcoming films, visit:GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Taylor Shumaker had three hits and three RBIs — including a two-run home run in the fifth inning — and Keagan Rothrock pitched a complete game on Sunday to help Florida beat Georgia 5-2 to win the best-of-three Gainesville Super Regional and clinch a berth in the Women’s College World Series.

Trump on Iran: From ‘very close’ to a deal to ‘very close’ to a bomb

No. 3 seed Florida (48-15) will make its second consecutive trip to the WCWS and its 13th since 2008.

Rothrock (16-6) gave up two runs — one earned — on four hits with a walk and five strikeouts.When it does come to economics, the discussion of whether or not there should be pennies is actually part of a larger conversation, says Ursula Dalinghaus, an assistant professor of anthropology at Ripon College in Wisconsin who studies the anthropology of money.

For example, a bedrock of American culture is the price tag ending in $.99, somehow trying to convince buyers that the 1-cent difference keeping the cost from the next dollar makes it a good deal, she points out. What happens to that price now?Also, while many people have switched over to digital forms of payments and couldn’t even tell you the last time they carried a coin around or had a bill in their wallets, there are many people who still use all kinds of physical currency — yes, even pennies.

“Cash is very important for a lot of people to budget, to keep control of costs. Even just donating a penny to someone asking for small change, it does add up,” she says. “I feel like we’re far too quick to only look at what is the cost of minting it or distributing it and we’re not really willing to look at the everyday experiences and interactions people have. So maybe if we don’t use small change, we don’t think about it. But other people do.”In a final irony, news of the penny’s fate came out on the eve of Lucky Penny Day, no less! (Yes, there is such a thing, on May 23rd.)

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