RC: I'll be 24. For one path, I'll be finishing college, then I will be off to med school [to become] either a pediatric surgeon or an OB-GYN, or something like that. Then my other path, if things go this way, I will audition and keep landing roles until I'd have to stop because college comes first. Then maybe from there, I'll probably publish a book and resume my acting career. But I will still have my [degrees]. Then I'll probably be a political activist for women's rights, and then I want to be an ambassador for the Red Cross. So I'm going to get that done in about 10 years. aq5831 TW: That needs to change. The words are a little hard to understand. That's [one] good thing these people did, they left it so vague that it's up to interpretation by our society. It's like an elastic band, it just keeps stretching. I think we need to add more amendments because society is changing. There's no way they could have known about all these things years ago. aq5831 by Sam Wang of Princeton University to Republicans drawing district maps fornearly five times aq5831 Rosdely Ciprian, 14, and Thursday Williams, 18, alternate nights debating Heidi in the play’s final portion, when an onstage coin toss indicates which side they’ll take. Both are competitive debate champs who’ve juggled high school, homework, and performing in the show since it first opened at a more intimate venue last fall. Now they’ve each added Broadway to their list of extracurriculars in an acclaimed play that’s a favorite at this Sunday’s Tony awards. aq5831
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| Time: | 2026-07-06 00:53:02 |