Word: isã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Apparently we’re all supposed to know what a Chinese daybed is??because apparently good, classy living means owning one. Trust Washkowitz and Kaden’s declaration of authority re: the intricacies of Harvard culture, and you’d think that we were all qualified to talk about how our “dining companion… tremendously enjoyed” his grilled sirloin at Aspasia. That we think “classy” means taking a cab to the hotel room you rented because you just can’t be bothered...
...pink scarf and an omnipresent smile, Riley says that she wants to hear their opinions about improving freshman social life since the issue is often not “overwhelmingly represented on the council.”“I got to see what kind of person she is??a very friendly, outgoing, bubbly, excitable person who really enjoys spending time with people,” says William M. Skinner ’09, who met Riley on the campaign trail.Haddock-Riley supporters have brought this energy to the Science Center lawn each day as they give...
...they identify with her marital status and are jealous of Clinton’s. (He doesn’t recognize the possibility that single women may identify with Hillary’s experience of being perpetually humiliated by her faithless husband.)Morris’ analysis of the 2008 race is??to say the least—interesting. But unfortunately, the bulk of the book is spent obsessing about Senator Clinton’s shrill liberalism, ruthless ambition, and emotional instability. (Even at 57, Hillary hasn’t “found herself,” Morris writes...
...goodbye to Kirsten…tsk tsk. Maybe she’ll send a “Stalk you again soon” card.) Ryan’s conflict with that surfer from the bad side of the tracks—Stalin or Voldemort or whatever her name is??ended when Ryan managed to, as Sandy paternalistically put it, “use brains instead of brawn.” Eloquent, no? Never before has a character pulled a complete 180 so much as Ryan’s adversary, as he went from keying the Cohens?...
...both succeeds and fails. On one hand, “Rent” may have succeeded in reducing some of the stigma associated with the disease. Students may find it difficult to understand the degree of stigma that used to be—and to some extent still is??attached to HIV and AIDS. To this day, foreign nationals with HIV cannot visit the U.S. When “Rent” was being written, political leaders could still talk about AIDS as a punishment for gay people or a plague on the immoral. In this context...