Word: harmfulness
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...their lungs. Those maniacs are Harvard's own Ted Malliaris '03 and Curran D. Hendry '03. The unsuspecting center of attention wears a mullet--a haircut featuring long hair in the back and short hair on the top and sides. Malliaris and Hendry mean no harm; they're just playing the mullet game, in which the players are awarded points for spotting rare forms of the elusive mullet. This excitable pair of Harvard frosh recently embarked on a pilgrimage of sorts, traversing the fertile mullet heartland between Washington D.C. and North Carolina. While on their quest, Malliaris and Hendry uncovered...
...important because a lot of nations worldwide are looking back on a lot of harm that has been done, and they have decided it's time to do something about that harm," Ogletree said...
...WHEN THE TEARS CAME] Breaks down and says she "never intended to harm...
...anger resists unified field theories. It is a mystery. The angriest Harry Truman ever got was the time the music critic of the Washington Post criticized his daughter Margaret's singing. Truman threatened the man with bodily harm...
...fights back is the one who gets called for the foul. It is a rhetorical and psychological truth that you cannot be the one to praise your own achievements. Just as true, alas, is the fact that you cannot be the one to protest and/or react to the harm done to you. It happens in basketball all the time--a player puts up with shoves, elbows and the occasional stranglehold until he can't take it anymore and retaliates. Because of what I like to call the Murphy's Law of Blind Referees, the retaliating player gets caught and called...