Word: hung
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...thought it was a chippy, physical game,” head coach Lisa Miller said. “I thought we hung in there and kept putting pressure on. We stayed on our game plan. We didn’t let any of the physicality throw...
...North End were almost as reassuring as the things I heard and saw while walking through the neighborhood. It was like stepping back into the 1930s, into a family-run community. Maria, the owner of the eponymous pastry shop, was in the back cooking while her daughter hung out in the front after school. Everyone was on a first name basis. The old men muttered as they shuffled along the street, heads down. The town buzzed with chiacchiere—the rumor and gossip that flits between extended family. There were no Starbucks stores, but there were lawn chairs...
...Manuscript,” Kargman’s favorite theatrical performances at Harvard have been Chekhov’s “The Seagull” on the Loeb Mainstage and Kopit’s “Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mama’s Hung You In the Closet and I’m Feeling So Sad,” the inaugural production on the New College Theatre stage.Kargman has also acted in nine student films and is the co-student liaison of the Harvardwood program. Her liaison partner is also her roommate, artistic soul mate...
...with just 11,100 fully trained professionals serving the entire country - the smallest number in 16 years - a combination of fatigue and frustration is laying a dangerous groundwork. Doug Church, union spokesman for the National Air Traffic Controllers Association, says the practitioners of this unsung profession are being hung out to dry. "We're left trying to hold the system together like MacGyver - with duct tape and scissors and string." TIME caught up with air traffic controller Melvin S. Davis, a 22-year veteran and the facility representative for Terminal Radar Approach Control for Southern California, which serves airports...
...world in which Djata’s father is taken away without notice, his house is entered without a warrant, his friend breaks his ankle in order to avoid going to school, and principals threaten that any children not in their seats will “be impaled and hung in the schoolyard.” Djata, of course, does not realize the totality of the situation; it is up to the reader to fit together the facts and realize the true terrifying nature of Djata’s society. Djata is very much preoccupied with simply figuring...