Word: mayerã
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...Writing as Psychology”—to celebrate the release of the 2006-2007 issue of “Exposé: Essays from the Expository Writing Program.” Pinker stressed the importance of conciseness while highlighting former Tufts President Jean Mayer??s 1982 statement, “Men with guns never starve,” which explained a complex issue involving aid to Poland’s then-military regime. “The monosyllabic words that conjure images immediately [have] stuck in my memory,” Pinker said. He also explained...
...Leading the way was sophomore Greg Shuman, who finished with a two-round total of 151 (74-77), good for 33rd overall in the tournament. Freshman Louis Amira was only one stroke behind him with a two-day score of 152 (79-73), one shot better than sophomore Danny Mayer??s 153 (72-81). Junior John Christensen and sophomore Peter Singh also contributed for the Crimson, with scores of 155 (75-80) and 158 (85-73), respectively. Harvard placed fifth with a team score of 603 (300-303), just one stroke behind fourth-place finisher Dartmouth. Texas Christian...
...start, the team called on them to produce results. Freshmen Danny Mayer and Greg Shuman competed for the Crimson in all five fall tournaments, and freshman Peter Singh made four appearances. At the McLaughlin, the first event of the fall, in which the team finished in 12th place, Mayer??s three-under 67 would prove to be the team’s lowest score of the season. At the Yale Invitational, the first spring event, Harvard held a two-stroke lead after round one but fell to sixth place overall after posting a combined score...
...Bridge” resonates with the vocal intensity poured into “Dividing Day.” Unfortunately, some of the pop songwriters represented on the album don’t provide McDonald with material as emotionally rich as Guettel does, making her inspired recreations of John Mayer??s facile “My Stupid Mouth” and Neil Young’s boring “My Heart” seem vapid in comparison...
...fact, Mayer??s scriptwriting ability was informed not so much by writing experience as it was by childhood experiences of illness. “When I was about five or six, I had severe asthma attacks,” he says. Despite his “near-fatal” condition—Mayer lost part of his lung during that period—he looks at his childhood of hospital visits and medical tests in a positive light, saying that it has spurred his interest in a medical career, possibly as a pulmonologist...