Word: belonging
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...hand doesn’t help. Whatever happened to the fluffy woolen winter scarves that actually man the front-lines against frostbite and wind-chafed skin? Unless global warming turns Cambridge into a desert and the Square into a sandstorm, let’s keep our kaffiyehs where they belong: in the drawers next to our granny panties and hot pink leg warmers...
...came up with characters based on what would fit in an enchanted forest."Chen also says that character-creation isn't just about puns."You can either come up with a character by thinking of a funny pun for a name or you can think of something that might belong to the setting and think about how to make her special so she fits into a Pudding show," she says.MAKING THE CUTThe process of putting together a Hasty Pudding show has changed dramatically over the years, most recently in the logistics of the script comp.Prior to the 157th show, writers...
...clear picture of what he sees as a Harvard athlete, and from his viewpoint, he may be getting the type of players that he’s after. “That’s what we are going to try to attract—kids that belong here, and obviously candidates that can be admitted to Harvard, but yet have the capacity in athletics from a basketball standpoint to help us raise the level of our program,” Amaker says. “I think we’ve been able to target those kids, we?...
...York Mets. I'm O.K. Really. I've been through worse... even though this was, well, awful beyond imagining. The losses-seven straight to the crude, macho Phillies, then 12 out of 17 down the stretch. The incessant errors. The pitchers throwing cantaloupes to hitters who didn't belong in the majors. The mental errors that weren't scored as errors. The feeling, in the end, that no lead was safe because-no lead was safe. The realization that every walk surrendered, even a two-out walk with the pitcher coming up next, would lead not just...
...time for its 160th anniversary. Entitled “Fable Attraction,” the performance will feature a collection of fairy tales in which no traditional story is held sacred. “Basically we want to make a splash and show that not only do we belong there, but it’s our favorite place to put on a show,” said co-writer Brian C. Polk ’09. “It’s of historical significance to us and to Harvard...