Word: rayed
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...point, although its approval would depend on Harvard’s plans for the land. “If Harvard has institutional uses for the property, they would have to vet it through the community and task force first,” Shumaker said. Harvard Allston Task Force Chairman Ray Mellone also said that it was too early to determine the impact that a possible deal would have on the Allston community. “It is entirely possible that Harvard will own every piece of land in Allston within the next century,” said Mellone...
Baby boutiques and department stores are featuring nursery lines with curvilinear high chairs, sleek wooden rockers and oval-shaped cribs that would make modernist masters Charles and Ray Eames feel at home. "It used to be unheard of to have anything but a pink or blue nursery," says Trish Holbrook-Meyler, owner of Modern Nursery, an online boutique whose sales have risen 84% over the past year. "But today's generation of parents--who tend to be older and more used to their existing dcor--are opting for sleeker lines that go with the rest of their furniture...
...just got a number of emails, and text messages, and phone-calls, all giving me support for being out here, and I think that just shows what kind of character the team has.”Speaking on behalf of the team, Harvard women’s soccer coach Ray Leone reciprocated Nichols’ humility.“We’re very pleased that she got an invitation,” Leone enthused. “She’s a fantastic player...she’s a very technical and very tactical player, and she understands...
...started when, given a chance to play with a scanner, Veasey chose to X-ray his own worn-out sneakers, the first of many "junk" items - toys, teacups, gadgets - he's since experimented with. "They may look awful on the surface," Veasey writes, "but once the internal workings are revealed ... all objects can be appreciated for their structure...
...Veasey has a studio in an old radar station lined with a foot of lead and equipped with an industrial scanner 60 times as powerful as medical ones. But to make a life-size X ray of a Boeing 777 for Boston's Logan Airport in 2003, even that wasn't enough - he needed artistic ingenuity too. Over several months, he digitally stitched together 500 separate X-rays of the plane. The resulting picture is exquisite and gets beneath the surface of every detail. Except for the pilot and crew: for them, Veasey used skeletons as stand...