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What? The tailgate shuts down after the second quarter? I can’t hear you. I’m so drunk I have lost auditory sensation. 1 bottle Gatorade 1 patch of grass, for pouring out half of Gatorade 1 part rest of Gatorade 1 part Vodka/Rum/Everclear/Sprite Zero—in your drunken stupor it’ll all be the same...

Author: By FM Staff | Title: Drinky Drink | 11/16/2005 | See Source »

...Peretz's 10 years heading the Histadrut, Israel's labor federation, he squeezed successive governments with general strikes and, after a falling out with Barak, formed a breakaway faction in parliament. It was the grass-roots devotion of union activists and the faction's supporters that earned him his surprise win last week. Peretz promises a more conciliatory approach to the Palestinians than Sharon's. Opponents lampooned him during the campaign, saying it was impossible to imagine the roughhewn Peretz meeting with President Bush to discuss the peace process. But Peretz told TIME that he'll cut out the middleman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Israel's New Labor Pain? | 11/14/2005 | See Source »

...really good experience to be in a race where there are tons of girls who are fast going out with you,” Scherf said. ”I really tend to like that course. It fits to my strengths running on rolling hills and short cut grass.” In that race, Scherf finished fifth in her heat and sixth overall in the 464-woman field. That experience and a strong, competitive season has encouraged her to set lofty goals for the NCAA Tournament. “My intention is to go out there and give...

Author: By Brad Hinshelwood, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Scherf Takes Fifth, Heads to NCAAs | 11/14/2005 | See Source »

...Fool For the City” (comment, Nov. 7), Nikhil G. Mathews argues that the crime, pollution, and lack of chirping birds and beautiful grass are the reasons why the urban setting of Harvard is a drawback...

Author: By Andrew L. Kalloch | Title: Value Of Cities Is In Its Lessons, Not Its Annoyances | 11/14/2005 | See Source »

Ironically, these “terrors of urban living” seem to denigrate the relative trivialities of the country (chirping birds and glorious grass) and accentuate the important educational opportunity available from living in a city like Cambridge. After all, I’d rather wake up to the sound of a blaring horn and be exposed to the deepest problems of society—which are laid bare for all to see in Cambridge—than be serenaded by chickadees in a tranquil setting where the only people I run into are transplanted suburbanites who close their...

Author: By Andrew L. Kalloch | Title: Value Of Cities Is In Its Lessons, Not Its Annoyances | 11/14/2005 | See Source »

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