Word: palmers
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...emotional satiation ends in disappointment. The frustration is most poignant in the case of Maps, the eldest. While the younger three vie for the affection of a childless couple, Maps sees parental figures with a hardened, distrustful gaze and instead turns to the overstated sexuality of Lucy (Teresa Palmer), the town’s fair-haired fast girl. Radcliffe, who has clearly found his niche in the troubled-orphan role, plays the part well. As with his full-frontal stint in British West End production of “Equus” earlier this year, Radcliffe channels a darker...
...concerned about the freeloading older students. “I just want people to be comfortable here and enjoy the day,” Ameer said. “I think students appreciate the chance to talk to a real person about their questions and concerns.” Palmer Rampell ’10, however, said he did not find the Concentration Fair as helpful as he had hoped. Trying to decide between East Asian Studies, Philosophy, and English before the end-of-semester deadline, Rampell had come to the fair to learn more about his options...
...spot.The Crimson’s A-division team of junior skipper John Garrity and junior crew Kerry Anne Bradford took 13th place, but each successive division improved on the preceding one, as the B-division team took seventh-place and in C-division, Harvard finished in sixth.Freshman skipper Alan Palmer and freshman crew Quincy Bock sailed in B-division while the sophomore duo of skipper Liz Powers and Kate Harris were the C-division team.Boston College, MIT, St. Mary’s and the U.S. Coast Guard rounded out the top five, while Vermont sailed in just ahead...
...Sunday, Harvard won the MIT Invite, cruising to easy wins in both divisions thanks to the efforts of two freshmen and two sophomores. In A-division, freshman Alan Palmer skippered with crew Konstadt to a 10-point win, while freshman skipper John Stokes and sophomore crew Kate Harris led a B-division performance that was 46 points better than second-place Tufts...
David Lynch and Mark Frost made something really weird happen, and I'm not talking about Laura Palmer's murder, a dancing dwarf or a Log Lady. They turned prime-time TV into a giant indie art-house theater, and regular American channel surfers by the millions became its denizens. The story of a teen girl's death--and the pie-eating, deadpan-soliloquy-spouting FBI agent investigating it--carried on the theme from Lynch movies like Blue Velvet of sordid secrets and ancient horrors hidden behind a faade of wholesome Americana, proving that TV could equal or surpass...