Word: distantly
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...took the year off to live on a commune in rural Mississippi. “I just felt like it was the thing to do,” said Picker, who was booted by the Ad Board for punching Helen Vendler. But Picker’s distant location and striking lack of charisma didn’t stop Sally I. Klein ’02 from visiting last weekend and hooking up with him in a tent, thus drawing the ire of Jennnifer T. Cohen ’02, whose strange craving for men in tents continues unsatiated...
Unlike most investment banking hopefuls, who can recite their “five-year plans” as readily as their Harvard ID numbers, Krinsky refuses to censor herself or her column for the sake of some distant and as yet unknown job opportunity. “The column’s on my résumé,” Krinsky says, “I’m not embarrassed...
Since Princeton’s Melissa Finley had given up just one baserunner since the third, a Crimson comeback seemed distant when Cooley stepped to the plate with one out. But her timely hit made the comeback possible...
Instead, the book opens into widening circles. Crowley’s story soon has three principal figures, though the third, JFK, remains distant. Nonetheless, he is at the center of the novel as the last true American poet, the last person to carry the nation’s spirit. Falin speaks of Pushkin as Kit might speak of JFK: a national poet “must express our spirit, must stand for us and speak...
Harvard (4-4, 0-3 Ivy) looked promising early in the season after opening with four straight wins. That hot start is just a distant memory now. The Crimson’s chances for an Ivy League title are gone and Harvard must win its final three Ivy games just to avoid a losing record...