Word: halloweening
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...home,” said Danielle L. Buckley ’06. Three weeks into the school year, the residents of the White House have thrown one large-scale party and no teas. They have no plans for entertaining the masses in the near future, but never fear: Halloween is less than a month away...
...says Jane's law partner and friend Jack McKay. "But when the opportunity came along to have not just one but two children, they took both babies without blinking." Roberts is a hands-on dad who plays a mean game of Candyland and enjoys trick-or-treat duty on Halloween. "We used to have hobbies," Jane tells colleagues, "but we do kids now." They are active at Church of the Little Flower, a Catholic congregation in a well-heeled section of Bethesda, Md. Jane's volunteer efforts help promote adoption and parenting resources. But Feminists for Life hopes...
...birthday parties as well. On Halloween Sal, Ron and 2,600 Rockyites--some from as far away as Montreal, London, Sacramento, Winston-Salem, N.C., and the Bronx--made a pilgrimage to Manhattan's cavernous Beacon Theater for a tenth-anniversary bash. Sal presented sham Oscars to each of seven R.H.P.S. actors, who tried not to look as if they had wandered into a Star Dreck convention. The audience judged a costume contest: dozens of odd fellows dressed as their favorite Rocky characters. Everyone had a ball. Richard O'Brien, dressed for the occasion in a cunning black tube top with...
...quietly, comfortably and just a little eccentrically. They eat out practically every night, chauffeured to one of a few favorite, mostly Italian restaurants, where Horowitz dines on pasta and the inevitable sole. After returning home, he relaxes by watching a triple feature of adventure and horror movies (The Terminator, Halloween, Raiders of the Lost Ark) on his videocassette recorder, then turns in about 4 a.m. and sleeps until noon. He no longer smokes, does not drink and never eats meat...
...they responded with a different but just as American idea: forming gangs. "Tap boys," they were called, which stood for Tall Arab Posses. "The parents realized their children were drifting from what was holy and valuable to them," says Zarzour. "They were getting involved with everything from drugs to Halloween...