This year, Ms. Carey debuted a new Las Vegas revue, and, to celebrate, a group of 36 “lambs,” mostly in their 30s and 40s, boarded a party bus and cruised the Vegas strip for about three hours.[…][picture with “#Lamb4Life”] Ms. Carey among the lambs on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2015.[…]But in conversations with more than a dozen self-identified lambs, it was her songwriting that was most consistently cited as her defining feature.[…]The lambs’ investment in the arc of Ms. Carey’s life and art echoes that of the fandoms surrounding her ’90s contemporaries who are regarded as “confessional” women singer-songwriters, like Tori Amos and Ani DiFranco.
The District [of Columbia] authored an amicus brief on behalf of 18 states urging affirmance.
Meanwhile, the trade will have to make them [laptops] much, much cheaper, without compromising the screen: even at £500 a time they would be too nickable to walk home from school with.
In an article in Athletics Journal, Paul A. Smith described fartlek as a continuous overdistance run with numerous faster-paced interval runs interspersed, until the runner feels tired, but not exhausted. Smith claimed that because fartlek existed in the mind of the runner as a form of play, it deemphasized the feeling or perception of fatigue. […] In a typical fartlek workout, you pick some landmark such as a tree or a bush and sprint to it, then jog until you've recovered.