Word: hille
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...really sunny" said, Marya L. Hill-Popper '96, who ran with Andrew T. Cowan '96, adding, "It was just really exciting. I feel great, it was so much...
...couples who had gotten married today and were running together," Hill-Popper said. "They were wearing like a veil and a tuxedo...
...complicated figure he had been in life: a fan of Hermes ties who liked to dine in deep-fry joints; a defender of the little people who enjoyed being chauffeured around in limousines; a dealmaker who could talk policy (if only to better horse-trade on Capitol Hill); a big-time Washington lawyer who never gave up public service; a man of conviction who often skirted the ethical edge; a keenly optimistic black man in the white establishment. His resume contained a gold-plated series of civil rights achievements, even if he refused to let them define him only...
...Easter lilies at Anderson's Florist Shop. He also won in 1945 at the advanced age of 37 and told a reporter, "Life merely begins at 40, and I have three years to go." Kelley no longer runs in the marathon, but runners can still pass him on Heartbreak Hill in Newton, where there are twin statues of Kelley--as he ran in his first victory and as he ran in his 61st Boston...
...movie mixes grunge and glitter in the way of a Steven Bochco TV show, which is understandable, since director Gregory Hoblit has won a bunch of Emmys for his work on Hill Street Blues and L.A. Law. The script, by Steve Shagan and Ann Biderman, also partakes of Bochco's strengths and limitations--good dialogue, firmly etched secondary characters (nicely played by John Mahoney and Frances McDormand, among others) but not much suspense. The only potentially scary guy--Edward Norton's weirdo defendant--is safely behind bars most of the time. Diverting without being fully absorbing, this is a film...