Word: lifeã
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...that she can barely keep up. Weirdo’s entrance to the market has been welcomed by both customers and other business owners. Weirdo Records customer Jason Tetreault—a self-described “vinyl junkie” who has frequented Boston music stores throughout his life??said that he was impressed by the new store. “Just from looking at the stuff, I’m blown away,” said Tetreault. “The sixties vinyl section looks pretty sick.” At Twisted Village on Eliot Street?...
...exclamation “FML”, and allowing readers to vote on who “deserved” it and whose life is really “f***ed.”The top anecdotes tend to follow a certain pattern: a brief recount of one of life??s little disappointments, followed by a twist of the knife that makes it just that much worse. For instance, one classic submission reads, “Today, my girlfriend dumped me proclaiming she wanted someone more like her ‘Edward’. I asked...
...public entity that is kept alive by our imagination. The true anonymity is not the lack of names on a book cover, but being forgotten by history, being generalized into a mere name. John Mullan’s book, then, rescues the authors from anonymity by giving readers their life??s story, their reasons for concealment. This, I think, is the true treasure in Mullan’s book...
...these flowers, no matter how short-lived or delicate, is a testament to those unbreakable bonds worth striving for—love, familial ties, and friendships. German director Doris Dörrie’s “Cherry Blossoms” is a similar reminder to appreciate life??s transient but spectacular moments. This touching film, though at times overstated in its sentimentality, incorporates the evocative power of the plant’s symbolic imagery to encapsulate the experiences of a family coping with an unexpected death. Not long into the film, Trudi Angermeier (Hannelore Elsner) discovers...
...praised Des Forges as “the world’s leading expert on the 1994 Rwanda genocide and its aftermath.” Those who knew Des Forges at Radcliffe, when she went by her maiden name Alison Liebhafsky, expressed no surprise that she had made her life??s work to uncover the human rights abuses in the world. Susan E. Shepard ’65, who lived in Comstock Hall (now part of Pforzheimer House) with Des Forges, said she remembered her as a smart and serious student, as well as “kind...