Word: cooling
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...time to go on a subcontinental safari. The monsoons are gone, the danger of flooding has passed and the air begins to cool. Tigers are just one of the many delights that await nature lovers in India: elephants, wild boars, cobras and bears also abound. The best way to catch the country's extraordinary fauna is to plan a two- or three-day trip to one of India's numerous national parks, where jeep and elephant-back safaris will take you deep into the forest. Four of the best national parks are listed below; a few days spent...
...couldn’t use a good roping now and then?). FM takes the theme straight to Harvard, the better to help you understand the world in which you live. Whether he loves the Head of the Charles or just head from Charles, the Harvard man looks classy yet cool, stylish but slack. Just remember one thing: these guys always come...
...what he did. He tore my family apart.” Nonetheless, some students feel that the message tee is a convenient forum. “I don’t think it cheapens the message,” Wright says. “It’s a cool way to show your beliefs. It makes people think.” While the effects of certain messages are ambiguous, some are crystal clear: think twice before you go the “I facebooked your Mom” route...
...collars). The light cottony material is great for protecting eyes and ears from desert sand, but pointless for New England’s bone-chilling autumn breeze. No matter how tightly those hippie-philosophy types clasp their newly purchased kaffiyeh around their necks, the fact remains: despite that cool devil-may-care demeanor, they’re freakin’ cold, and the organic nonfat soy sugar-free vanilla latte they’re clutching in the other hand doesn’t help. Whatever happened to the fluffy woolen winter scarves that actually man the front-lines against frostbite...
Want to emulate Mary Kate Olsen’s hobo-chic look? No need to go dumpster diving–just go vintage. Being this cool is easy when you go to Harvard; within the Square alone, there are three vintage shops to discover. The only thing that’s ever changed in Oona’s, the 35-year-old Harvard Square institution, is its daily inventory. Shelves and racks are stuffed with leather jackets, satin dresses, western-style shirts, and wool coats. Kathleen White, founder and owner, searches far and wide for every hidden treasure, which ranges...