Word: punching
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...about Steven A. Franklin ’10? He always said he wanted to make Harvard a fun place “for the rest of us.” But guess what? After an extremely successful punch season, Steven joins the A.D. Club, ditching his old roommates for a sweet off-campus apartment. He decides that he can never live in his hometown of Indianapolis again, deeming Indy “too unsophisticated for my bicoastal sensibilities.” He also learns how to dance, well...
...captain Ron Klain and Leary as field director Michael Whouley) urge the likes of Christopher to fight GOP fire with fire, you can see the seeds of the schism between netroots activists and Establishment Dems. The activists regard their colleagues as sellouts or wusses, too refined to throw a punch and too concerned about the mainstream media's approbation...
...While Canada’s “Marxism” functions as a punch line on the right side of the aisle, 46 states in the union have higher combined federal and state corporate tax rates than their counterparts across the border...
...Calandrelli ’10 says. “Yet everyone calls it the most fun part of the year. All of a sudden, you’re getting to learn what their style is, how they like to put pieces together,” Nationals routines pack the punch of three discrete styles—jazz, pom, and hip-hop—in under two minutes. Yet the judging rubrics don’t leave a lot of room for individual interpretation: movement must be hard-hitting and in unison all of the time. “Even jazz...
...doubt as to why he’s eternally single. Jake never develops as a character and never moves beyond his infuriating inferiority complex. The highlight of his portion of the film comes when he gets drunk with his brother, a sequence that is funny but lacks any dramatic punch. This was truly a wasted opportunity on Burstein’s part, as this storyline adds very little to the film. These flaws, however, do not cripple “American Teen.” Burstein transports the viewer back to high school, opening a window into the lives...