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Here’s a box of our best: some of the most interesting words we’ve printed about love and relationship over the past eight years — some of it’s nutty, some of it’s bittersweet, maybe you’ll find the cherry.
By The SunFebruary 1982I don’t like what I see around me: people with big cars, four bedroom houses and mobile homes and closets full of clothes. I don’t want to know I am one of the people who have so much in a world of people who have so little.
By Barbara CraneFebruary 1981I don’t think when people get divorced it is necessarily a failure of the marriage, I think sometimes it is a finishing, a completing of the marriage. That you sometimes have worked out all the things that you can work out together.
By Elizabeth Rose Campbell, Sy SafranskyDecember 1979An acceptance, a sacred and beautiful covenant, a vehicle for going to God
By Our ReadersAugust 1978Since three-fifths of all American divorces begin in a kitchen spat, the housewife should familiarize herself with the kinds of lethal weapons she uses in the kitchen, and be on guard for their potential misapplications.
By Mrs. George B. HargroveMarch 1978Personal, political, provocative writing delivered to your doorstep every month—without a single ad.
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