Word: balled
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...doing," he says. "'Is that a throw gesture? Is it a juke? A stiff arm?' Everyone knows how to make a throwing motion, but we all have our own unique way of throwing." But consider the upside: you're basically playing football in your living room. "To snap the ball, you 'snap' the remote back toward your body, which hikes the ball," Schappert says. "No buttons to press, just gesture a hiking motion, and the ball's in the hands of the QB. To pass the ball, you gesture a throwing motion. Hard, fast gestures result in bullet passes. Slower...
...image. In a recent survey conducted by Hong Kong Polytechnic University, 70% of the local residents polled said they had a more negative opinion of Disneyland since its opening. "Disney knows the theme-park business, but when it comes to understanding the Chinese guest, it's an entirely new ball game," says John Ap, an associate professor at the university's School of Hotel and Tourism Management...
...line-drive just foul of the third base line. Ultimately, Vertovez could not convert and was caught looking at the inning’s final strike. The Crimson offense again looked promising in the bottom of the fifth when sophomore Danielle Kerper took first on a third-strike passed ball by Boston College catcher Ashley Obrest. Watkins pitched the remainder of the game. giving up a total of two runs and six hits. McAteer, who allowed four runs on five hits, did not allow the loss to cast a shadow on Harvard’s season...
...kind of wasted his effort,” Harvard coach Scott Anderson said. “I don’t even know what the statistics were for the game, but it was unbelievable.”Flood helped the Crimson gain control of the ball in the first two overtimes.But missed opportunities on the offensive end proved to be Harvard’s downfall.None came closer than junior attackman Evan Calvert’s shot in front of the goal near the end of the second extra frame, which missed sealing it for the Crimson by inches...
...does, however, fall short in a few instances—the most glaring of which is Drake’s decision to sexualize the Queen of Hearts (Lauren L. Jackson ’07). While this has the potential to be an interesting departure from the traditional chubby ball-buster, it is not executed well (no pun intended), and ultimately comes off as not within the spirit of the book, and more than a bit odd.The most unique aspect of the production is its staging, where a fascination with the spaces formed in theater is manifest. This is primarily...