Word: sicked
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...pleasure of living in the same New York apartment building as Kevin Bacon. Sometimes I’d say hi to him in the hallway, wait until he turned around and then mouth the words to Kenny Loggins’ “Footloose” while pulling a sick dance move/split combo. This has probably happened 8 times in my life, but I never had the courage to ask him if he wanted to do that thing where you wiggle your arms like an electric shock is passing through you and then you pass the electricity to the next...
...Company co-director Shana J. Cloud ’06.“Performance has come very easily to me over the years,” she says. In Cloud’s first performance—at the tender age of five—she replaced a soloist sick with chickenpox on the hallowed stage of Avery Fisher Hall in Lincoln Center. According to Cloud, “After having jumped across that stage in front of thousands of people, there’s nothing that can really frighten me.”The euphoria of that first performance...
...male undergraduate was arrested in the Quad early Sunday morning after he allegedly stole a pair of rubber gloves from an ambulance while a emergency medical technician (EMT) aided a sick student inside Currier House. The student, Thomas E. Rodger ’08 of Dunster House, was arrested and charged with breaking and entering into a motor vehicle with the intent to commit a felony and disorderly conduct, according to Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) spokesman Steven G. Catalano. Rodger, 20, told The Crimson yesterday that his charges had been dismissed. “The whole thing was blown...
...pungent and vibrant, the ironic title rings true. In fact, the film is so highly stylized that one would half expect a movie completely devoid of any meaning. But once the tale ends, it stays with you, whether you liked it or not. Bottom Line: It’s sick, it’s twisted, and it’s one of the best films of the year...
...dining hall lady who checks us in says the game makes her sick every year,” says Jonathan A. Gatto ’07. “But we armed her and now she feels better.” Gatto is one of the organizers of this year’s Quincy House game of assassin, in which Nerf-gun-packing Quincy residents try to “assassinate” other participants. Versions of assassin have been played at Harvard since at least 1981, when three freshmen organized a game. The rules of the game vary...