Word: brushed
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...dick around and dick around and then when something really needs to get done, you mobilize,” he says. But Byrnes and 1998 Harvard Law School (HLS) graduate Jamie W. Marquart were not completely unoccupied during their law school days, as they explain in their new book, Brush With the Law. Marquart developed a gambling habit, while Byrnes spent his time smoking crack and having sex involving—depending on the occasion—one, two or three individuals, sometimes including Harvard undergraduates...
Although the preface to Brush With the Law includes a letter from a Yale law student warning about the influence flippant books might have on the legal profession, Marquart and Byrnes assure readers that their bons mots are harmless...
...helpful,” Campbell wrote. Specifically, she suggested that students “Wash your hands frequently—most important!” We sincerely agree with Campbell, and even believe that Harvard students can take good hygiene measures a step further. Students should shower daily and brush their teeth after every meal to show gastroenteritis who’s boss—and to make section a little more bearable...
...don’t really have rules,” Elana replies. Brendan leans in, but the moment is ruined when Nick reenters. “Did you brush your hair while you were out?” Brendan asks. “I just want to reemphasize that you have a small member,” Nick replies. And that’s when Elana breaks out the whipped cream. Nick and Brendan lick it off her finger, with Brendan going for the forehead lick as well...
...magazine editor, I wasn't all that surprised to read Roger Rosenblatt's take on historian Stephen Ambrose's brush with plagiarism [VIEWPOINT, Jan. 21]. The vast amounts of information available on the Internet provide endless opportunities for free "cut-and-paste" material. In one year, my publication caught three writers who had lifted--almost directly--Internet information for use in their stories. One rather well-known writer had the audacity to appropriate an exquisite passage from the works of Isak Dinesen and weave it into his own story--unattributed, of course. Plagiarism never fails to induce a feeling...