Word: creamed
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...cookie the size of a plate...and it’s warm and gooey,” said Stephanie T. Chevalier ’07. But the Grille managers are open to expanding their menu, in response to student demand. Their first experiment is set to be ice cream sandwiches. “We’re hoping that the state of Quincy Grille will be better than it was two years ago when it was in its heyday,” Conlee said. Most who remember the Grille are thrilled for its reincarnation. “It really fostered...
Hilles, for example, which is opening officially on October 12. The student organization center at Hilles is great...it’s just nuts—this is a space just for student organizations, just for students. HUDS is also building a penthouse cafe with ice cream and smoothies and pizza, which will stay open late and take Board Plus...and then there?...
...cacophony of the Square any day. I skip the Mather shuttle so I can visit you on my walk to the Yard—without you, how can I rationalize coming to lecture 15 minutes late? I am always surprised by your unique and occasionally bizarre ice cream variety—if you leave, I’ll never get to try the “Grape Nuts” flavor! Where else would tattooed and pierced townies custom mix Earl Grey and Crimson Berry tea when I need both caffeine and Vitamin C? I’m sorry...
Like a rainforest standing in the path of a new and exciting time-share, we glibly bid adieu to the sweet taste of Toscanini’s homemade ice cream and pleasant old-world-meets-new-world charm, and Gnomon Copy’s $2 per page fax price and über-convenient coursepacks. And we eagerly await the entrance of a branch of, say, TD Banknorth, the nearest location of which is inconveniently in Waltham...
...treat phantom pain as they were to explain it. They resorted to trial and error, using remedies originally intended for other ailments that seemed to relieve nerve pain. I had a sampling on my nightstand: pills to combat seizures and depression, lozenges for bronchitis, allergy nasal spray, arthritis cream, medicated patches for shingles and an electro-stimulation device. It was hard to tell if any of them worked. The crushing, stabbing pain in my right hand flared and subsided--but never went away. Doctors said it might last a month, a year or a lifetime. Every amputee was different...