Word: foolishly
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...five people who care…Something Harvard should care about: Paris is doing Harvard. The when and where is not clear, but when the dust clears, she’ll be table-dancing at the ’Poon…No poon was had by one foolish senior last weekend, when he missed his chance to score one of Florida’s richest bitches due to incessant cuddling with his straight male roommate…SPOTTED: Spurned sorority girl rigging costume contest at Halloween party to deny her ex, who attended with another member, the glorious title...
...really tempting fate. And it's not as if there aren't alternatives; the regular season could start earlier, or be cut back to the old 154-game schedule, to allow the playoffs to unfold in the relative warmth of early-to-mid October. "It's a foolish thing," says former umpire Dave Phillips, who worked four World Series during a 32-year major league career that ended after the 2002 season. "Baseball is not meant to be played in those conditions. They're sitting on a time bomb. This could be baseball's worst nightmare...
...trees. He was chased by the officer and held until Cambridge police arrived, according to Harvard and Cambridge police logs. “It doesn’t make a difference if you’re a Harvard student,” Pasquarello said. “People do foolish things, and then they get arrested.” Powers was arraigned Monday on charges of vandalizing property and released on personal recognizance by the judge, according to the Cambridge Chronicle. Battles between the Lampoon and trees are nothing new. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, there were several...
...Harvard’s administrators should try to respect student opinions—it would be impossible for the College to accomplish its mission of fostering academic and personal growth if faculty and administration failed to respond to any student concerns. But when administrators make unpopular decisions, it is foolish to complain of student “rights” being violated: Such rights never existed in the first place. The idea that a student must approve of all decisions made regarding his welfare is a fallacy born of a lifetime’s exposure to a culture that teaches...
...sense of the limits of pranks saved not only her, but also often her more foolish friends and colleagues, from disaster. Having won the confidence of her peers, in the spring of her junior year Drew was elected senior class president, a role even more influential in the lives of others than president of the school council...