Word: afraid
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...floors, chandeliers, fireplace, and grand piano, provides an unusually refined ambience.Spillane-Hinks and her producers sit behind a long table, calm and much more serious than at Pizza Q. That’s not to say they’re all business—they aren’t afraid to laugh with actors, especially those they know, and their discussion when the actors were out of the room was the light banter of close friends, covering everything from theater to Thanksgiving. Still, they missed no detail. Executive Producer Zoe M. Savitsky ’07 gives each actor, even...
...mountain of crap that the latter has produced. Poor J-Lo is stuck in the middle (literally—the video splits LL’s still-impressive torso in two, with the aging ass queen wasting space, wearing strange towel-hats and barely singing.) I am also afraid that the average age of the three stars (damn near 40) is going to encourage hordes of middle-aged women to hit the bar mitzvah dance floor when this song comes on. The video itself is dated, as director Hype Williams remakes “Mo’ Money Mo?...
...afraid of imprisonment, as evidenced by her antipathy for the life of the nuns. She is afraid of abstract sermons or classical music. She spends her money on multicolored skirts and jazz records. At one point, she becomes so fed up with the dreary abstemious existence at Imber that she returns to London...
...Mather only hours before the election was supposed to end on Thursday morning, prompting the UC’s Election Commission to extend the voting period in the House until noon on Friday, according to Commission Chair Michael B. Love ’08. “We were afraid that this would be massively unrepresentative of the people in the House,” Love said. The only candidate on the Mather ballot, Christopher M. Pak ’08, eventually won after receiving 43 first-place votes after the deadline was extended until Friday. His closest competition...
...main quadrangle of the University of Illinois. In an editorial accompanying the cartoons, Gorton acknowledged that the cartoons were “bigoted and insensitive to the Islamic faith,” but stood by their publication. “I addressed something that mainstream media was afraid to address,” Gorton said. “But I firmly believe in covering sensitive material.” Chairman of The Council of Islamic Organizations of Greater Chicago Abdul Malik Mujahid, which represents 55 mosques and over 400,000 Muslims, called the cartoons offensive but said that the agreed...