Word: horned
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...Istanbul: It's concrete, there's cracked pavement and you need to watch traffic. But running the shores of the Golden Horn (below Sultanah-met) or along the Bosphorus (above Ortaköy) is special. Take in the views of the water, the stunning architecture and the old men playing cards. Madrid: Options are a good thing, and Retiro Park has many. There's a dirt trail that passes around the park's outer edge, and concrete paths that weave through sculpture gardens and around ponds, so you can run short or long and still make time for the Prado...
...want to know,” Nicolson added. Childs attributed the smell to two separate leaks, one inside the serving area, and one in the dining hall. Nicolson said maintenance workers replaced the pipe last Thursday, putting down deodorant and attempting to neutralize the smell. Heather S. Horn ’08 said she witnessed the clean-up process. “They were pumping a lot of stuff out of there into a vacuum truck,” Horn said. “It was this yellow van...it looked really sketchy.” Students said the deodorizer...
...then vaulted onto the professional scouting radar (at least two evaluators were in attendance on Saturday) by hurling seven-plus innings of no-hit ball against Arkansas in the NCAA Tournament. Staehely was plagued by shoddy infield defense (six errors, four by shortstop Greg Van Horn) as he surrendered six runs, only one earned, and seven hits in six innings while the Crimson lineup ran his pitch count up to 105. When asked about the preseason Pitcher of the Year snub, Haviland jokingly said, “I didn’t notice that,” before deciding...
...Walsh said. “I’m really pleased that we knocked Staehely out. He’s the kid that ended our season last year.”But it was six Princeton errors that sealed the win for Harvard. Freshman Greg Van Horn had the roughest day in the field for the Tigers, committing four errors at shortstop. With a 6-1 lead, Walsh left Haviland in the game entering the ninth inning, hoping to rest his bullpen for the next day’s doubleheader against Cornell. But when Princeton loaded the bases...
...hisname does not sound familiar, that's just how maverick clarinetist Tony Scott wanted it. Among the loudest horn blowers in jazz and a venerated sideman for greats like Billie Holiday and Duke Ellington, he was one of the rare masters of bebop--a jaunty sound previously deemed incompatible with the clarinet's soft tones. The arranger and composer also branched out to embrace sounds from countries like Japan and Senegal, helping launch the genre now known as world music. In doing so, he skirted classification--and high-voltage celebrity. "Without experimenters," he said, "jazz would die a lingering...