Word: misse
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...third section, a funk piece; one dancer is just enough off the rest of the team to warrant notice. With a huge screen that projects the camera’s-eye view of the event both as each team is performing, even the smallest mistakes are hard to miss...
...extracurricular and academic commitments, meaning many students must somehow find a free moment to run to a dining hall. Consequently, it’s not hard to find an undergraduate who occasionally—and in many cases routinely—has to shell out cash to eat after missing Harvard’s limited 5-7:15 dinner dining hall hours. Yet just how widespread this problem is has been a matter of speculation until now. A UC report on dinner hours, made after an extensive 270 student phone survey, has shown that 83 percent of students miss dinner...
Back home the newspapers call her the Queen of Fire and Water because a fire broke out during one preliminary pageant and it rained heavily in San Juan on the night she was named Miss Puerto Rico. Deborah Carthy-Deu, 19, paid no attention to those omens. Like any self-respecting teen, she was impressed with the fact that the last of her facial marks from a bout with chicken pox cleared up two days before the deciding pageant in Puerto Rico. From there she was on a roll, and last week in Miami she became the 34th Miss Universe...
...oddity called oceanQuest, a documentary series about a Cousteau-like excursion through the world's oceans. Debuting in August for five weeks, the show combines some good undersea photography with ludicrous moments of "true-life drama," centering on the reactions of one neophyte crew member, Shawn Weatherly, a former Miss U.S.A. and Miss Universe...
...show that could return in midseason if it does well. Also set for August is CBS's Hometown, an hour comedy-drama about a group of college friends from the '60s who reunite for some soul searching in the '80s. The resemblance to The Big Chill is impossible to miss: characters reminisce about antiwar rallies and ponder the implications of "getting caught up in the mainstream." Despite its glib predictability, the series boasts a likable cast, headed by Jane Kaczmarek and Daniel Stern, and at least a veneer of seriousness missing from most other summer entries...