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The Associated Press
Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant has been a big headache to the Blazers this season.
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Every day, we have the opportunity to dream, to pursue our passions, to be a blessing to others and to be blessed. So, let us see the vastness of our great potential and the many possibilities that God is setting before us and then, go after them. If we put our hearts and minds into what we'd like to accomplish and if we but try and don't give up, there is no dream too big for us to achieve. We each have the incredible power within us right now to create a better life. How big are your dreams?
Is there something special that you'd like to fulfill?
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INTRODUCTION
The common perception is that originalism and popular constitutionalism are incompatible. For example, historian Saul Cornell has recen...
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Hired as paid employees, parent partners work directly with other parents and support them in their efforts to advocate for their children in schools, access community services, and create healthy home environments.
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Inspiring imagination has been the hallmark of Amelia Barton's career as an educator.
The seed for that imagination was planted while she was growing up on a farm in rural South Carolina .
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To the Editor:
God has put something beautiful inside of you, and he wants you to make a choice. Will it be hell or heaven? To be sure of your possibilities, you must pay close attention to the truth you have heard, so that you would not drift away into false teachings. Paying careful attention is hard work. It involves focusing our minds, bodies, and senses; listening to Christ means not merely hearing, but also obeying {see James 1:22-25}.
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When you're young and farm born, May isn't so much a month as a carnival; a pleasant stretch that's no longer spring but not quite summer, a time heavy with little other than possibilities.
On the southern Illinois dairy farm of my youth, May was a corner- turner, the swing month of both the farm and my family's year. The eventual success of almost anything that mattered to us - from October corn yields to October baseball for the St. Louis Cardinals - was usually measured by that month's yardstick.
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A woman walks down a broad set of steps after crossing the Pont des Arts in Paris. It is a windy day. Men in formal dark suits hold onto their top hats and lean into the wind. The woman picks up the skirt of her ankle-length black dress with her right hand, revealing a long white petticoat as she negotiates the final two steps at the end of the bridge. In her left hand, she holds a small handbag and an umbrella close to her body. The lacy white scarf tied around her neck stands out from her black shoulder cape in a perfectly horizontal extension. The scarf and petticoat appear to be mirror images of a cloud passing briskly overhead.
She appears to be the same woman wearing a black hat and dress that I saw on my desk calendar last week. In that painting, she stood alone at the edge of a ...
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the Masters on TV This weekend's TV schedule for the 2011 Masters: Thursday: 2-6:30 p.m., ESPN Friday: 2-6:30 p.m., ESPN Saturday: 2:30-6 p.m., CBS Sunday: 1-6 p.m., CBS
AUGUSTA, Ga. - On the far end of the course Wednesday, near the only palm tree at Augusta National, Lee Westwood rolled long putts across the fourth green as he practiced alone on a quiet afternoon before the Masters.
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PORTLAND -- Possibilities Counseling, a once-thriving, now- shuttered Auburn mental health agency, is likely to be the subject of a class-action lawsuit, despite the fact that most of its social workers and other affiliates have now been paid what they were owed.
In Portland on Tuesday, a Business and Consumer Court judge said he'll likely allow hundreds of social workers, counselors and other affiliates of Possibilities Counseling to band together in a class- action lawsuit against the agency and its former billing company, Affiliate Funding. But justice Andrew M. Horton also said he will likely set criteria that limits who can join such a suit.