Word: mistakenly
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...being the subject of said tragicomic mishaps, I’m helping teach people that all black faces are not the same...Nonetheless, I’d like to things easier for people, including myself and Jay. (I talked to Jay recently and found out that he gets mistaken for me “all the time.” And that’s nice, if only for the sake of balance. We both also get mistaken for Toby Anekwe ’03.) So, you see that black guy up ahead? Take a good long look. Use facial...
Martin S. Bell ’03, a government concentrator in Winthrop House, is associate sports editor of The Crimson. He is often mistaken for Brian E. Fallon ’03 by sheltered types who’ve never met a sports editor before...
Perhaps for this reason, no evidence was found of JH’s tendency to be mistaken for a Port-O-Potty. And as Pfister points out, urea is highly acidic—a killer that would eradicate, not cultivate, John’s fungi. Evidence of the tradition’s ongoing nature lies in students’ own confessions, statements like those of an anonymous senior in Quincy House, who proudly admits, “Well, I peed on him last weekend...
...century Vienna.” In order to enforce morality laws, the Duke of Vienna disguises himself. Shakespearean chaos ensues with plenty of comedic characters, including a nun, a Duke disguised as a monk, and a promiscuous lover. Of course there is plenty of personal drama wrapped up in mistaken identity and elaborate deceptions. Directed by Patrick Demers, a professional director, and assisted by a guest artist actor, the class of ’06 is sure to relay the pertinent themes of this centuries-old comedy. The play will be performed Thursday night, Friday, and Saturday...
...refuge in that duty?the horror and suffering that would usually paralyze a bystander become objects of study and inquiry, details and incidents to be recounted so that the reader better comprehends what really happened. The criticism most often hurled at the profession?that it is parasitic?is mistaken. The journalist's task is to understand, and sometimes that means getting close enough to see the tears and hear the sobbing. The bombings in Bali were the kind of story we at TIME never want to cover, yet it is precisely this type of event that brings out the best...