Word: childrenã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...roundabout.”“It’s an attempt to dress up the Christian message in forms that consumers are already familiar with,” he said. For examples, Stevens points to “VeggieTales,” children??s stories whose Biblical messages often aren’t apparent until the end, and the cinematic versions of the evangelical, apocalyptic “Left Behind” series, which often look “in some ways like an Arnold Schwarzenegger movie.”This more indirect approach will soon...
Alexa P. Summer ’06 always assumed that she would raise her children Jewish. Now that she’s in a serious relationship with a practicing Catholic, however, her children??s faith is no longer quite so certain. “It’s more up in the air than it’s ever been for me,” she says. In deciding who they want to date, most college students say they do not think about marriage or children. But the choice to date someone may have unexpected implications?...
...this fall. Currently three brothers volunteer at the Harvard Square Homeless Shelter every Thursday night. In October, the fraternity co-sponsored a party with the Delta Gamma sorority to raise money for victims of Hurricane Katrina. For its next community service endeavor, Sigma Chi plans to collaborate with the Children??s Miracle Network to raise money for Children??s Hospital in Boston. They will collect money, toys, and clothing after Thanksgiving and continuing through the holiday season. “It’s nice to see college students that are invested in making a difference...
...gives you the self-confidence to realize talents you never knew you had.” The Fund for Cultural Enrichment is not the Theatricals’ first contribution to charity. In the past, the Hasty Pudding Theatricals has donated to the Phillips Brooks House Association and the Boston Children??s Hospital. The Theatricals will continue its commitment to the fund by taking a collection at every performance and by holding a charity show. “As we sail into our new theater with HPT’s 158th production, “Some Like It Yacht...
...instance, in one of the most unusual vignettes, a young country girl (Juliette C. McClendon ’09) who has inexplicably laid a very real, white, round egg (possibly representative of future generations of African-Americans) talks wistfully of how beautiful and strong her “children?? will be. The effect is oddly sweet, mostly because of McClendon’s conviction, and lends a tone of reconciliation to “The Colored Museum” that softens its often razor-sharp edge...