mmmmm donuts!!
2006-10-24 00:25:58
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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America is run on junk food plain and simple.
BTW, I didn't even know that there were still dunkin' donuts around anymore.
2006-10-24 00:43:56
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answer #2
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answered by Zodiac_Child 3
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We dont even have a dunkin donuts here!( in my state) Nice try
2006-10-24 05:51:00
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answer #3
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answered by RIA 5
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Yes indeed! Love those pumpkin muffins too! And I think they should do a remake of the Starbucks movie "Akeelah and the (spelling) Bee" and do it with a Geography Bee instead...
And just to get them started _ a board game about travel in a border-free world: Who built the Golden Gate Bridge?
A tenacious campaigner, Joseph Strauss was selected by his peers as both class president and class poet. For his commencement address in 1892, Strauss penned a 21-stanza poem titled "Reveries," and presented his senior thesis, an outlandish proposal to construct an international railroad spanning the Bering Strait between Alaska and Russia. Alfred K. Nippert, Strauss' fraternity brother, recalled, "Before a crowded house, a bewildered faculty, and a distinguished group of visitors and speakers, this modest, soft-spoken young graduate unfolded his Utopian dream." Though Strauss' plan was unorthodox, his earnestness won over the skeptical audience.
William Gilpin, the first governor of the Colorado Territory in 1861-1862, was born in Pennsylvania on October 4, 1813. After two years of education in England, he returned to his home state to attend the University of Pennsylvania. William Gilpin was also an internationally recognized futurist, who was able to envision enormous potential for Colorado. Gilpin's vision of a world connected by railroads with Denver as its natural focus, was the basis of his theory of an Isothermal Axis, which today is a cornerstone of modern geopolitical theory. Furthermore, Gilpin's embellished and exaggerated advertisements of Colorado's resources lured many to the Territory of Colorado.
Who was it that proposed the Pan American Hwy form Argentina to Alaska?
2006-10-24 00:22:06
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answer #4
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answered by clophad 2
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No, it sounds as if DD is trying one of those advertising campaigns that assume that everyone in America drinks their coffee. They hope that others will say to themselves "I didn't know so many people drank there coffee in the morning, it must be real good. Maybe thats where I should go"
It's like those restaurants you pass by from time to time that say something like "World Famous Al's Pizza" the only thing famous about the place is the name. Nobody knows about it and the food isn't that good.But it still is an example of advertising by saying "oh, you didn't know, we are world famous?"
Now with DD, people do know about them but they are trying to tell us that their coffee fuels America. Meanwhile, I know plenty of folks that are coffee drinkers that don't drink DD coffee. I'm not even sure that they lead the U.S. in retail hot coffee sales. Starbucks could have very well have past them by now.
BTW-Their coffee is good, I just don't like ad campaigns that insult intelligence.
2006-10-24 00:32:24
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answer #5
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answered by stymie1970 4
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Not this american - we do not even have dunkin donuts in my area and even if we did it is definitly not a food I indulege in on a regular basis or for that matter even a semi regular basis
2006-10-24 00:18:52
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answer #6
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answered by freemansfox 4
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I don't know; myself, I run FROM Dunkin Donuts. Nasty coffee, stale donuts.
2006-10-24 17:57:28
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answer #7
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answered by zzooti 5
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Nope, runs on gas I checked the fuel gage.
2006-10-24 00:17:15
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answer #8
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answered by jadeaaustin 4
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No.
2006-10-24 00:27:33
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answer #9
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answered by Unique 4
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