Word: cabs
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Officers dispatched to the Harvard Business School lot on a report of an individual sitting on the hood of a cab and refusing to let the cab leave. Officers arrived and searched the area for the individual with negative results...
...characters - friends or contacts - began to stream in and a party ensued. Toward sunset, having drank steadily for the entire day and consumed no food besides peanuts and crisps, I was unconscious on a bench in the corner. Sinclair concluded my introduction to journalism by placing me in a cab with the fare home. When my parents opened the front door, I stumbled to the bathroom and was spectacularly sick. Then I reappeared before them with the life-changing words: "Mum, Dad, I want to be a journalist; I want to be like Kevin Sinclair...
...street and a London taxi stopped and the taxi driver - he was a tough-looking cookie - came out and said "You're Hillary, aren't you?" And I said "Yeah." And he said, "Congratulations. You know you've done a great job for us!" He got back in his cab and drove of. Now, the contrast was when we arrived back here in New Zealand. There was a big crowd - Mayor of Auckland and all the rest of it. I was put in this great big limousine to be driven off, and the window was down and a big hefty...
...third floor of the market at 99 Java Road you'll find the Tung Po seafood restaurant, tel: (852) 2880 9399. Ask for the owner Robby, or his partner Larry. Tell him you would like to order dishes Frank likes to eat. When you've finished dinner, take a cab back to the SoHo ("South of Hollywood Road") district, and go to the funkiest bar in Hong Kong, Feather Boa, tel: (852) 2857 2586. The place is always crowded and you will most likely have to elbow your way inside, but it is without doubt one of the most interesting...
...other performances. “Through the Looking Glass” (choreographed by Patrick H. Quinn ’10) was a happy and carefree piece, featuring Miller and Beth G. Shields ’10 in jeans and casual shirts. Their quick and light movements paired with Death Cab for Cutie’s “Crooked Teeth” was an unusual combination that was quite pleasant. Similarly, the free flowing hair and sarong-style skirt of Marin J.D. Orlosky ’07-’08, who is also a Crimson staff writer...