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Word: bandness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...There’s never been a proper riot without a band so we had to get people out of the Yard and into the T stop,” McCambridge said...

Author: By Samuel C. Scott, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: City Spills into Square To Celebrate Sox | 10/21/2004 | See Source »

...creative after a while. All the work, always doing something instead of having a place to just create—it made it tough to stay with a creative side,” says Michael Gould ’05, whose stay in Cambridge has forced his band, Shadowbox, to take a hiatus. “People just expect perfection of themselves, [but] it makes it hard to perfect what you’re doing when you expect yourself to be perfect...

Author: By Aria S.K. Laskin, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Not True Players, They Just Jam—a Lot | 10/21/2004 | See Source »

Broviet Union is all about taking things in stride. Blockmates Theodore B. Bressman ’06 and “singer/air guitarist” Seth H. Robinson ’06 founded the band, but made room for second drummer Kyle J. Berkman ’06 and bassist Daniel J. Crane ’06 at the end of last year. A self-described comedy band, Broviet Union doesn’t feel the pressure to rise to another level. Last year, Broviet was so well-received at Currier House’s variety show that the audience...

Author: By Aria S.K. Laskin, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Not True Players, They Just Jam—a Lot | 10/21/2004 | See Source »

...hasn't noticed 1201/2 East Main Street--up a mere flight of stairs from Bush headquarters. The John Kerry--John Edwards posters in the windows of James M. Linehan's law offices give a hint of what is going on there each night when a smaller but equally determined band of Democratic volunteers takes over the premises for its own phone-bank operation. Linehan thought he knew just about every Democratic activist in the county, so he was startled when dozens of strangers showed up at an organizing meeting in his office last month. It turned out they had received...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Campaign '04: Fighting For Every Last Vote | 10/18/2004 | See Source »

THREE YEARS BEFORE John Fitch began contemplating the absurd--a boat powered by steam, not wind or men with oars--a warring band of Delaware Indians seized his raft, which was heading up the Ohio River with flour for settlers. The Indians scalped two of his companions; Fitch narrowly escaped a tomahawk blow to the head. This was his second brush with death at the hands of the Delaware tribe, whose swift canoes in 1782 often rendered the settlers' plodding rafts easy prey...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Who Made America Rich? | 10/18/2004 | See Source »

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