Word: frat
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...broken. Some mornings I wake up to a bright yellow puddle down the hallway. It twinkles in the bathroom light, almost smiling. I frown. When I hear a visitor give a startled shout, I have to tell her, it’s not that we’re disgusting frat boys, unable to clean up after ourselves. No, in fact, the opposite. That slight stench coming from the toilet bowl says we care. It is the smell of a cleaner planet.Now that is an inconvenient truth.Samuel P. Jacobs ’09, a Crimson news writer, is a history concentrator...
...recipient of the spookalicious invitation, was suspicious of the email. “I thought it was an MIT prank. It’s kind of creepy,” says Sowemimo-Coker. However, there is some validation in receiving an elite (albeit sketchy) invitation to a tech-frat down river. “At least they know where the best girls are,” Bringsjord says. “We are awesome!” Again, Mena could not be reached for comment...
...came to Blodgett Pool replete with energy, pseudo-instruments, and a crew of boisterous, slightly-inebriated frat boys. The Engineers would leave with their heads held low, their minds as numbingly confused as the MIT defense in the fourth quarter. In a game not soon to be forgotten, the Harvard faithful saw the men’s water polo team light up the evening with 6 goals in the fourth quarter en route to an 11-8 victory over visiting MIT. Junior David Tune orchestrated two offensive assaults on the Engineer net, tying the game at eight a piece...
...Crimson face paint, willing to defend Crimson football to the death. But that one weekend in November is the only time we unite under the banner of Harvard. While we do not and may never have the kind of unity that state schools build from huge sporting events or frat parties, Harvard students do want a greater sense of connection with their college. Think about Harvard-Yale or Yardfest 2006: Though it may be taboo to admit it, we like celebrating and cheering on Harvard, especially if we have a common enemy (such as Yale, or Eliot House). Both exemplify...
...Luke Wilson, tackling the lighter side of film comes naturally. He’s played the rebellious frat-boy, the sometimes sappy romantic lead, and the brunette half of a quirky, floppy haired sibling comedy duo. But come this Friday, with the release of his new motel-trip-gone-awry movie, he’ll take on a new role: horror film star. “This is obviously not the kind of thing that comes my way quite often,” says Wilson of his role in “Vacancy,” which also stars Kate...