Word: frolic
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Unfortunately, the Blizzard of 2001 was blown far out of proportion. Students had excitedly awaited the promised three feet of snow and howling winds, yearning for a true dose of nature's wrath. Groups carefully decided how they would frolic; local hardware stores had a field day selling salt and shovels. We wanted the blizzard because we wanted the camaraderie of the collective struggle. We also sought the puerile joy of snowball fights and cancelled classes. A monstrous nor'easter has more potential unifying power than the Game. Deep in our gut, we know that fair Harvard could benefit from...
...Huntington Avenue, Mozart's music - the play of its light and intelligence, its frolic and clarity - fills a theater packed with young people. It is a Boston University student production of "The Marriage of Figaro," done in Italian, "Le Nozze de Figaro," the full four acts, uncut, lasting almost four hours. It seems like half an hour. The lovely production could be moved to the stage of the Metropolitan Opera without much apology or revision...
...medical marijuana - along with a few demographic pet issues like Napster and the intentions of hip-hop. They asked a lot of patently impossible, Miss America-type questions (Mr. Gore, what will you do as president to end pain and suffering?) and Gore did not miss any opportunity to frolic in his boilerplate material. Which went over very well. The future of America, if this was it, seems genuinely interested, if a bit preeningly idealistic and not particularly incisive. And they're social liberals - to a point...
...interviews, I was fuming. Just who do these guys think they are, anyway? I don't care where either of them "find their spirit" at the end of the day. Once his official business is finished, the President can take a flying leap for all I care. He can frolic in a field of daisies or soak in bubble bath if that's what does it for him. It's the daylight hours that matter to me. And, I imagine, to a whole lot of other women. So here's my message: Sock it to us, George...
...watches his daughter Emma frolic on the Strawberry Hill playground next to the Haggerty School, neighborhood resident Ted N. Goble '50 says he is content...