Word: kidded
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Some people choose to go down in history as “that kid who fought a chair” or “that kid who tried to dance with a wall and broke his leg.” Some get hammered on a weeknight, show up drunk to Organic Chemistry and are asked by a teaching fellow to “please leave and not return to this class until you are sober.” Some play strip-Jenga with new friends at a party, only to be reminded later by someone they don?...
However, you are undoubtedly not the first person to do this. Next week, there will most likely be a different ridiculous drunk kid, and you will be forgotten. So take a moment to pause, reflect, realize you got a bit out of hand, and then move on. You either learn from your mistakes or are bound to repeat them...
...walk home through the pouring rain. SATURDAY Things got started frighteningly early in Loker Commons where, at 8 p.m., the Harvard-Radcliffe Science Fiction Association had a live-action roleplay (LARP) ball. Donning tiaras and military uniforms, students and alums gathered together between the pool tables and that kid finishing his problem set for waltzes and swordfights. At the CityStep party at the Signet, people who teach dance to children ate whipped cream off each other’s bodies. A classy affair in Harvard’s premiere arts-and-letters society, teams of teachers dressed...
...Local Adventures The books in Fodor's Around the City with Kids series are all by parents who live in the place they write about. For each of 15 U.S. and foreign cities covered by the series, the authors suggest exactly 68 museums, monuments and activities?kid tested and rated for age appropriateness. The books provide info boxes filled with trivia about the attractions, pointers to child- and adult-friendly places to grab a bite to eat and warnings about when it's wiser to pack a lunch. There's a game section to keep everyone occupied while waiting...
...afternoon like they had their cups on backwards. Still, I managed to enjoy myself. How? I’m not so sure. But something in two different sequences during game one reminded me of baseball’s ineffable appeal.* * *The first play was no joking matter. A kid got hurt. Columbia starting second baseman Kyle Roberts injured his knee when, on a ground ball to shortstop with runners on first and second and nobody out in the second inning, Matt Kramer slid hard into the base to break up the possible double play. It worked, too: the fielder made...