I have read the USA Weekend edition for years and tried and kept several useful recipes. I’d never entered any of the prize games. This is nice.
I have one comment about security mechanisms involving “SEEING” THE ODD Scrambled PRINTED WORDS we have to imitate to allow our responses to go forward. I wear trifocals as it is. I control the light of my computer screen. I only use larger, simple fonts to type my outgoing text. But I think there’s a big disconnect between the ages, visiual accuity, and knowledge of physical human development with the aging process that the people drafting the programs for jumbled letters are missing. The same holds true for a restaurant menu printed in miniscule, low-contrast, ill-chosen fonts that we’re to read dim dining rooms.
Those of us who are “low-sighted”, seniors, have special settings for our computer screens for clarity. Even these don’t help with most security “jumbles.” It’s hard enough reading actual newsprint in hardcopy, but the same visual mess on a computer screen is unnecessary. Don’t be ageist, be proactive.
Every week I get “This sweepstakes is closed.” I think I’ve only been able to enter twice.
USA Weekend is awesome
I still can see no new cookbook that we are supposed to enter for each week of this sweepstakes. Anyone have a clue?
entering for the new cook book..
Isn’t there supposed to be a new cookbook each week to enter to win?
Love cookbooks.
love usa weekend!
Can’t wait to buy the newspaper each Sunday morning to see which cookbook is highlighted in the “USA Weekend”; having fun trying to win one!
I have read the USA Weekend edition for years and tried and kept several useful recipes. I’d never entered any of the prize games. This is nice.
I have one comment about security mechanisms involving “SEEING” THE ODD Scrambled PRINTED WORDS we have to imitate to allow our responses to go forward. I wear trifocals as it is. I control the light of my computer screen. I only use larger, simple fonts to type my outgoing text. But I think there’s a big disconnect between the ages, visiual accuity, and knowledge of physical human development with the aging process that the people drafting the programs for jumbled letters are missing. The same holds true for a restaurant menu printed in miniscule, low-contrast, ill-chosen fonts that we’re to read dim dining rooms.
Those of us who are “low-sighted”, seniors, have special settings for our computer screens for clarity. Even these don’t help with most security “jumbles.” It’s hard enough reading actual newsprint in hardcopy, but the same visual mess on a computer screen is unnecessary. Don’t be ageist, be proactive.