Word: bageling
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Pringle recalls an incident at nationals, at which dancers from New York University who had $40 per day stipends from their school, actually bought food for the Harvard dancers. “We looked hungry, I guess,” Pringle says as she laughs and bites into her bagel. Laszkowska comments on other limitations on the CDT compared to their competitor schools: “We all do go to Harvard—other schools can practice twice a day—girls have other commitments here.” CDT practices are no less intense, though...
...neighborhood where diners often have to wrestle for Saturday night seats, Harvard Square restaurants are now themselves playing musical chairs. Finagle A Bagel will transfer its 14 JFK Street location and liquor license to Z Square Cambridge, a new restaurant and cafe that plans to make better use of the eatery’s 6,000-square-foot space. Finagle A Bagel is not leaving Harvard Square though. It will relocate to a smaller storefront on Mass. Ave. that previously housed the pastry and dessert area of C’est Bon Café. C’est Bon, meanwhile...
During his final two and a half years at Swarthmore, Miron operated a nightly bagel business that delivered sliced and cream-cheesed bagels to Swarthmore dorms at 10:30 p.m., assuaging students’ late-night hunger...
...part is reflected more what the students wear rather than what the dining hall serves. Either way, HUDS did focus on the one thing that matters most: the food. All in the same brunch, HUDS seemed to add special touches to almost every regular breakfast item. The bagel and lox had flavored cream cheese; the omelets were made at a very prominent omelet bar where we could pick and choose our own ingredients; the waffles, now decorated with the ornate “Ve-ri-tas” crest, had special toppings; and the French toast had a special Bananas...
...would jump on board. “Readers don’t want characters to appear half way through the book, or disappear half way,” Goldstein says. And then, like any other scribe, he had writer’s block. Setting down his egg-and-cheese bagel, Goldstein explains that his prose felt “stilted and too removed.” He finally found his voice after writing the early scene when Koh—described as “a sturdy Asian man” with an overflowing briefcase—first bursts into...