Word: fittingly
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...years ago, some students worked with visiting artists to build a set of picnic tables that were cut around Cabot's trees, some that fit snugly into the terraced corners of Whitman Hall and others that were free-standing. These tables are places to linger over a meal outside and listen to Hannah's sparkling laugh echo across the Quad; they are surfaces to sketch out thesis notes and to do take-home exams. One table, tipped on its side, becomes a backstop for a pitcher when Julian, our senior tutor, steps up to home plate and slugs a ball...
...committee has to make a difference on the campus but are concerned that it may not take as much action as is necessary. It is important that this committee does not just talk and suggest but take action and begin to initiate change on campus as it sees fit. There are many changes to be made, and the campus does not need another committee to just sit and discuss. This committee could make a crucial impact as an important first step in examining the position of women on this campus. We hope it will take the power...
...would expect the woman who played Thoroughly Modern Millie to throw a hissy fit. But when she was the only one in her Broadway hit Victor/Victoria to be nominated for a Tony Award, JULIE ANDREWS put her foot down. In front of an adoring matinee crowd, she announced that she was bowing out of the Tonys. "I have searched my conscience and my heart, and I find that I cannot accept this nomination--and prefer to stand with the egregiously overlooked," said Andrews, still in costume. Perhaps most overlooked: director Blake Edwards, Andrews' husband, whose career could have used...
...Kalamazoo, Michigan, for $6.15 an hour. She's talking now, says Sager, to "retrieve her name from the files of infamy," and to rev up her failed writing career. "What I did was horrible," says Cooke. "But I don't think that in this particular case the punishment has fit the crime...
News, which typically appeals to an older audience, never fit in with Fox's efforts to attract a young crowd with shows like The Simpsons and Melrose Place. "When I was there," says David Corvo, yet another ex-CBS executive who spent some time at Fox, "my strong feeling was that virtually nobody in the company except Murdoch was interested in supporting the development of a news division beyond what was needed to service affiliate newscasts...