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Columbus restaurants with burgers worth celebrating
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Cleaver in Grandview Heights sources most ingredients from Ohio
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شخصيات في الخاطر (2 ـــ 2): إدوارد سعيد (1935 ــ 2003 ) بقلم: د حامد فضل الله/برلين
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The developer, Brad DeHays, wishes it had been a lot sooner. I would have liked to have opened a month ago, said DeHays, owner of Connect Realty.
The project was delayed by construction challenges to the 1880s-era buildings, including a fire that damaged the roof and heavy rains that collapsed a wall soon after construction began last spring. Work continued through much of the COVID-19 pandemic until the fall, when outbreaks knocked out contractors. Every time a contractor got COVID, it shut them down, DeHays said. It wasn t so bad last summer, but in the fall, I couldn t go a week without a quarantined contractor.
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In a 1954 essay on Jane Austen, C. S. Lewis calls attention to the “hardness or at least the firmness of Jane Austen’s thought.” “The great abstract nouns of the classical English moralists,” he writes, “are unblushingly and uncompromisingly used; good sense, courage, contentment, fortitude, ‘some duty neglected, some failing indulged,’ impropriety, indelicacy. . . . vanity, folly, ignorance, reason.” For Austen, “all is hard, clear, definable. . . . Contrasted with the world of modern fiction, Jane Austen’s is at once less soft and less cruel.”
Moral firmness doesn’t make Austen ponderous or priggish; she’s no Mary Bennet, that fountain of misapplied aphorisms. On the contrary, Austen is among the most bemused and amusing novelists in English literature, capable of writing splendid scenes like the one in