Word: morbidities
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...exactly why the dish was so good. Like Green Tea Kit Kat or a modern building with ancient design elements, fusing the old with the new is unparalleled when done right. Unlike New York whose residents bemoan gentrification and Paris whose Centre Pompidou and National Library offer a morbid look at modernization, Tokyo knows how to mix tradition with transformation. Shrines are married seamlessly to the city landscape, the modern buildings are marked with ancient Japanese touches like glass panes that imitate noren (a traditional cloth), and midtown high-rises are laid out in patterns that replicate ancient rock garden...
...doesn’t want to shut down Guantanamo?”) and quipped that the Arizona senator is running for President because he wants to improve his New York Times obituary. Rest assured, Ms. Coulter, that McCain will be around for a while and that your morbid desire to the contrary, fed by your frustrated ego after the rejection of your favorite conservative sweetheart Mitt Romney, is as appalling as your belief that the empty venom you spit is somehow humorous or interesting...
...rests with me.” He was referring to the Iraq war, but he could have just as easily been referencing mistakes made at his alma mater, Yale University. Yet not even Bush can be blamed for everything that has gone wrong with that dismal institution. Rather, the morbid state in which Yale finds itself today can be traced back to a series of mistakes made by many different Yale affiliates. After all, the founding of Yale was based upon the biggest mistake of all when, in 1701, a group of ten Harvard alums thought they could do better...
...have this morbid fascination with being completely alienated from everybody, and a lot of the time I really do feel that...
...play. The Agassiz production began weakly with a confusing blend of discordant singing, incomprehensible dialogue, and insecure acting. By the second half, however, the actors became a lot more comfortable on stage (and thankfully sang very little), paving the way for solid performances and a captivating if morbid ending. The women in “Bodas de Sangre” all dominated the stage. The lead female actor, Gabriela Bortolamedi ’10, convincingly portrayed the Bride. Although it was occasionally evident that “Bodas” was her first play, she pulled through strongly...