The boxes summarizes are marked investigates with the word "Pulparindo" in bold black letters. . In this case, I raced home from work, raced to soccer practice, raced to help the boy install a battery in his car, raced to the restaurant for a 7:30 reservation, taking several illegal left turns along the way. By the time we walked into the Bathrooms, I felt like I'd run a marathon. "I just need something to drink," I tell my wife. "Hi," says the waitress. "You serve hard liquor?" I ask. "Sorry," she says. "That's OK," I assure her, because I could tell she feels bad about it. Brent would never have done such a thing if it hadn't been absolutely necessary. For the week, the index dropped 7%, its biggest weekly slide since September 2001. The wave of corporate takeovers is being threatened by a paroxysm in the bond market. "But that's Canadian," team member Erwin Lin, 30, said with a laugh. On the other end of the scale, both in team size and complexity, is Matthew Abrams, the lone member of the StarClimber team. Abrams, a 29-year-old technician at the Army Research Laboratory in Aberdeen, Md. , has spent just $7,000 on his climber, which is shaped like a giant kite with flexible solar cells stretched across it. "I'll be happy if I finish the race," he said. The youngest team, and one of the first to qualify, is a group of Northern California students from Westmont High School in Campbell. Team leader Larry Grattan, 50, a real estate broker, said he was inspired to put a team together after he attended last year's games. "I thought, 'We can make something that goes up better than that,' " he said. The team put together a solar-cell-powered device with two solar wings over the central electric motor. A father-son team from Auburn in Northern California have been working in a warehouse on the fairgrounds outside Las Cruces. Radiocarbon dating of cremated bodies excavated from Britain's Stonehenge appears to have solved part of the ancient mystery surrounding the 5,000-year-old site: It was a burial ground for what may have been the country's first royal dynasty. The new dates indicate burials began at least 500 years before the first massive stones were erected at the site and continued after it was completed, British archaeologists said Thursday . The pattern and relatively small number of graves suggest all of the interred were members of a single family. The findings provide the first substantive evidence that a line of kings ruled at least the lower portion of England during this early period, exerting enough power to mobilize the manpower necessary to move the massive stones from as far as 150 miles away and maintaining that power for at least five centuries, said archaeologist Mike Parker Pearson of the University of Sheffield, leader of the current excavations. "It was clearly a special place at that time," he said.
Disaster struck on a summer day in San Diego, when Treahy's beloved 20-foot fishing boat was parked street side with the outer hull plug open to drain any residual water . We get eight to 10 retired players dying every year, and when you see that, you realize you've got to do some positive things and keep on moving. "One thing that keeps him going, Robinson says, is participating in a program that takes underprivileged kids out on the ocean and teaches them how to fish. Interacting with the children, Robinson says, is a kick. "On the boat, he's kind of a rah-rah guy," says Philip Friedman, who runs the 976tuna youth fishing program . NEW YORK — The McClatchy newspaper company announced its second major round of job cuts in three months Tuesday and blamed a sour advertising environment in trimming its payroll by 10%. Although the announcement did not specifically refer to layoffs, McClatchy Co . SAN DIEGO -- Jonathan Broxton says he knows that Takashi Saito could be activated this weekend and his days as the Dodgers' closer could be nearing an end. But spending almost two months as Saito's replacement has reaffirmed Broxton's thought that closing is what he wants to do in the years to come. "I've been waiting for this for a while," Broxton said. I didn't want to be dead and have not made this movie. "--john . horn. Sure, there's lots of talk about "staycations," but staying home to organize photos from last year's adventure can only remind you of what you're missing.
But you know that [Baker] knows and he'll show you. "Baker, who declared before the Rose Bowl that he would return this season, had arthroscopic knee surgery before spring practice and is taking his final class this fall to earn a sociology degree. He suffered a cracked rib during training camp and played sparingly in the opener against Idaho, but apparently healed as the Trojans took advantage of a two-week window because of an open date. Then came Nebraska. "I thought we could run the ball, but I wasn't thinking like that," Baker said "It was cool . It has what DeVry describes as "a medieval, Disney storybook flair. "There is a main house, of about 800 square feet, with two bedrooms and one bathroom . The liquid is made from natural gas but will eventually be refined from U. S. -produced coal, which is abundant. The technology to turn coal into liquid fuel was developed in the 1920s by German scientists who sought to make up for scarce oil supplies . Owner Drayton McLane said the club would reevaluate whether Clemens should be around the team's minor-leaguers given his legal problems. "That makes it more complex, it sure does," McLane told reporters . "Why should I bring them customers if they treat us like dirtbags?"Some wineries say they'd rather lose the business. "I went deep into the Hindu philosophy. "Alone in his cell, he began what he called a process of "auto-psychoanalysis" to examine his actions. "It's not as easy as it seems," Geagea said "This needs fasting all the time It needs concentration It needs meditation.
It's just -- ah, Laguna. Is that your favorite collection?Every year I have a favorite collection . "It's not hard to come back here. "As a possible role model, congressional historians point to Edward M
