Word: dinners
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...furtive interlude between spreadsheets. It's becoming what it was always meant to be: a vast galaxy of bizarre amateur snippets. It's like those restaurants that serve only tapas: there's a lot of good stuff there, but afterward, you're never sure that you actually had dinner...
...like donuts and coffee! Peanut butter and jelly! Pilbeam and vodka! Tea Stop with Lady Godiva in the English Department: Lady Godiva, a naked noblewoman on horseback, will tell you why the “and American Literature and Language” was just bringing us down. LUNCH AND DINNER Naked Lunch with the English Department: The English Department is passionate about nudity. By far our most awkward—and well attended—meal. East Asian Studies Sushi: Sushi for everyone! Burritos, Brain, and Behavior with the Psychology Department: Your behavior may be monitored while eating...
...that he and Laura were privileged to welcome him to the White House and that the world needed his messages of morality and freedom. The theatrics continued with a fife and drum band and a chorus singing "Battle Hymn of the Republic." But by the time Bush held a dinner in Benedict's honor Wednesday night, with the Pope not attending (the Pontiff does not attend dinners given in his honor), it started to look as if Bush was laying it on a bit thick...
Harvard University Dining Services (HUDS) already provides the food in campus dining halls, but now it even offers friends to eat dinner with. The HUDS Advisory Council is coming to a dining hall near you, and its members want to hear what you have to say. After HUDS drew much criticism earlier this year for ignoring dining concerns, it is extremely heartening to see it reaching out to students. Now, however, it is up to us to dish out constructive feedback. Given Harvard’s reputation for bureaucracy, it is nothing short of miraculous that HUDS has asked students...
...Friday we had Shabbas Kiddush where we all go to the Jewish center,” she says. “A good friend of mine had a book of Yiddish music, and we would all crowd around the piano, and we would sing all of these songs after dinner. I learned a lot of the folk songs that are in the show in Lithuania.”The idea to incorporate these songs into a single cohesive play has been percolating in Togut’s mind for a long time. “I started writing the script...