Word: bagel
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Munching tentatively on a creation called a "blasphemous bagel" at the Leverett House grill the other night, the Crimson tennis team's senior captain and number-one player Tood Lundy was asked if he thought Harvard could win many matches on its tough spring break schedule...
...Street broker, is striving for permanent chic. Most nights he stations himself at the doorway (with a few bouncers) to weed the throngs begging for entrance. "We only want fun people," he explains. "The wilder the clothes, the better the chance you have of getting in. We discourage the Bagel Nosh-polyester group...
Pierpont, a freshman, then cooked an MIT hopeful breadstick and bagel, and outsteadied Barbara Arvanitis from Springfield at the baseline, winning three and one in the semifinals. In the finals, Pierpont cruised by B.U.'s Lida Prypchon, giving up only one game in each...
Well, that's all for the close matches gang. Make way for the bagel parade...
Ectoplasmic Bagel. The magnetic containment devices most widely used in fusion experiments are called "tokamaks." Invented by Soviet scientists in the early 1960s, tokamaks are toruses, or doughnut-shaped chambers, surrounded by huge electromagnets. Gas is fed into the chamber and heated until it becomes a plasma. Powerful fields produced by the magnets hold the plasma and keep it from touching the chamber walls. The temperature of the plasma is raised closer to fusion temperatures by passing electric currents and shooting beams of high-energy atoms through it. With these techniques, tokamaks have come the closest of any magnetic device...