Word: funning
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...adapt to one another’s techniques. “The demonstration partners have no idea what the response will be so they really have to be on top of their game,” Chin-Lee says. “It’s a lot of fun to watch.” Harvard Aikikai, an official dojo of the United States Aikido Federation, is now in its 28th year. The club has attracted a close-knit group of undergraduates through its free classes, open to the entire undergraduate community. These events provide personal training from professionals like...
...laughs at amusing corporate stereotypes, including the dumb blonde secretary who sleeps her way through the company and the boss who is overly fond of his alma mater, “Old Ivy.” “It’s going to be extremely ridiculous, fun and goofy, and a great way for people to end their semester,” Li says. With Harvard’s yearly outpouring of seniors set to graduate and swell the ranks of investment bankers, this musical will surely strike a chord...
...thought that the Harvard Classical Club (HCC) doesn’t have fun, you may change your mind when you learn that their update of “Adelphoe” involves “pre-marital sex, knocking someone up, and a complicated relationship between brothers.” That’s according to the theatrical production’s director, Zachary H. Taxin ’09. The original staging of “Adelphoe”—originally written by Greek playwright Menander and adapted by Roman scribe Terence—was, perhaps...
...sensory overload. “It was way better than Dartmouth’s [prefrosh weekend],” said Alexa I. Stern of Winchester, Mass. “There’s just so much to do—we’ve been having so much fun.” While many attendees commented on the unstructured nature of the weekend, they said they liked that the program didn’t attempt to change Harvard’s atmosphere for the weekend or shuttle prefrosh from event to event. “There haven?...
...tournament, which brought famed New York Times crossword editor Will Shortz and 120 cross-wordsmiths. The key to starting a crossword, Mahowald said, is to create several theme answers that fit symmetrically into the grid. Next, he recommended finding long words that form “fun, interesting answers.” As an example, Mahowald showed the group how he had constructed the grid for a crossword that will be printed in the Los Angeles Times. He said the New York Times rejected the puzzle because its theme answers were all colloquial phrases. A former intern for Shortz...