Word: otherã
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...Pastoralia,” impatient visitors and their bratty children pay to observe individuals dressed up as Cro-Magnons, who are allowed to speak only in grunts in the ersatz cave that is their workplace. (They can curse at their own misbehaving offspring, fax evaluations of each other??s daily performance, chainsmoke, bicker, flirt, and so on, only after their...
...then one day he’s standing in my kitchen, in his underwear,” the story begins. As the quarrel between the narrator and his quirky neighbor escalates to the point where they have no choice but to try to kill each other and each other??s children, the vocabulary of “home” and “family” and “freedom” in which Saunders couches their fight reminds us of its basic similarity to global conflicts whose causes and aims are often articulated...
...Institute of Politics and in avoiding the fate of the now-defunct Harvard Social Forum, which similarly sought to unite advocacy groups. By carefully listening to the groups it seeks to serve and by focusing on the ways these groups can learn from each other and support each other??s initiatives, CPS just might help facilitate a stronger and more effective political community...
...Weeks said. Fans also said they were caught up in the excitement. Beverly S. Stenson ’81, who came to watch her daughter, Jackie E. Stenson ’08, race, said that “everyone on the sidelines was cheering for each other??s family members and friends.” In particular, the elder Stenson enjoyed the halfway point, where she said many runners celebrated the mark by dancing. Jennifer M. Neeper ’08, who ran the last five miles with Stenson and participated in the marathon last year, said...
...atmosphere in which women are surrounded only by each other??a sorority, a female final club—is always really interesting,” she says. Because of this, the play is “not a period drama—the relationships, feelings, and emotions are timeless...