Word: janee
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...innings.Vertovez gave up six earned runs in just 1.1 innings of work, while junior Margaux Black was touched for three runs in 1.1 innings of relief.Freshman Julia Moore was perfect in her 1.1 innings. Though the Crimson was down, 10-0, heading into the top of the fifth, freshman Jane Alexander managed to get her team on the scoreboard.The rookie ripped a double down the left-field line and was brought home on an RBI single by co-captain Hayley Bock. NORTH TEXAS 10, HARVARD 6An eight-run fifth inning and four defensive errors were too much for Harvard...
...zero emissions,” Gain said. Deliveries—via MetroPed or otherwise—require a $5 flat fee plus $1 for each additional book, a rate reduced to make ordering books from home “more accessible,” Gain said. MetroPed owner Wenzday Jane said that from a customer’s vantage point, the delivery process remains exactly the same as using a traditional service. Every afternoon, a MetroPed “driver” stops at Harvard Book Store to pick up the orders—packed in repurposed shipping materials?...
...that have been forgotten in the intervening centuries.Mullan begins his book by seeking patterns to explain the psychology behind various author’s motives for publishing without attribution. His case studies read like a Who’s Who of English literature—from anonymous authors like Jane Austen, Jonathan Swift, Alexander Pope, and Walter Scott to those like Charles Dodgson (better known as Lewis Carroll) and the Brontë sisters, who used psudonyms. Mullan profiled authors who concealed their identities for social propriety, literary promotion, or mere mischief.Others, like John Locke, were forced into concealment...
ELTON JOHN to produce film in which aliens invade Jane Austen--era England. Title: Pride and Predator (we didn't make that...
...she’s been cultivating another personality: a colorful, 18th-century Scottish painter named Stewart Jameson, protagonist in her debut novel, “Blindspot.” Lepore co-authored the book, which is a parody of, and homage to, 18th-century style, with Brandeis history professor Jane Kamensky. “Blindspot” tells the story of romance and intrigue in Revolutionary War-era Boston. FM sat down with the historian for a coffee chat about time travel and 18th-century debauchery. 1.Fifteen Minutes [FM]: How did you and Jane meet each other? Jill Lepore...