Word: dominoed
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...brief, frenetic bongo riff leads to the vocal theme-each of title's four words held for a full bar-accompanied by the bass drum working out (at a much slower tempo) the immortal boom, ba-doom intro to Fats Domino's 1957 "I'm Walkin'." (The guys are singing heavenly choir, but the drums say Big Easy.) Then we're back in marching mode, with a piano and, for a few bars, a mocking trumpet. This time, all four Seasons participate in the narrative; the backing vocals don't just underline the story, they sometimes undermine it. Frankie sings...
...really like Van Morrison to come…I’d be willing to overlook the fact that he’s a wife-beater. My favorite songs are “Gloria” and “Hey, Domino.” None of this “Brown-Eyed Girl” crap—that’s just a bad song. It’s the same thing over and over again...
...Eliot and Lowell House dining halls been that both Houses have been forced to impose restrictions on non-residents during peak hours; a resident may invite one guest during traffic hours. Currently, Quincy is the only desirable River House that is restriction-less (at least for upperclassmen), and that domino too shall soon fall...
...words have altered lives, some quite prominent: Charles Colson was exposed to Lewis when he had the conversion that eventually transformed him from a jailed Nixon henchman to a mover in Evangelical politics and ideas; Domino's Pizza billionaire Thomas Monaghan has credited one chapter of Mere Christianity with his decision to sell his major assets and work to "populate heaven" via conservative Roman Catholic giving; the Lewis-abetted faith of National Human Genome Research Institute leader Francis Collins has proved that you can believe in both evolution and God. Other admirers have included Pope John Paul II, Greek Orthodox...
First, Eliot, now Lowell, and before long, likely Quincy. In a post-Cold War example of the Domino Effect, it seems inevitable that River Houses which have not yet adopted interhouse dining restrictions will soon fall in line. Lowell’s announcement last week that it would adopt interhouse restrictions is the feather that broke the broccoli chicken’s back. The new rules will send hungry freshmen and quadlings to the last bastions of free eating by the River—overcrowding them and provoking more restrictions in turn. In the past, we have advocated a free...