Word: snow
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Colorado. Snow-tipped peaks, perfect powder, second-home heaven. Then there's Denver. Modern yet still Western, sunny, livable...
...Crimson already got its revenge earlier this season, however, handing the Big Red a shocking last-second one-point loss at Lavietes Pavilion, critically damaging their title hopes. This time, bad memories and three-point shooting lead to a Cornell victory in the snow upstate...
They say that revenge is a dish best served cold. The No. 6 Harvard women’s hockey team will have an opportunity to prove just that when it takes to the ice in the ECAC Tournament semifinals against rival St. Lawrence tomorrow afternoon in soon-to-be snowed-over Hanover, N.H. The Crimson (23-6-2, 17-4-1 ECAC) has already played the Saints (27-6-3, 17-4-1) twice this season, losing both times, 4-2 and 2-1. The most recent game was deadlocked at 1 heading into the final minute before St. Lawrence?...
...singular grandeur. It is a day that is pressed between the icy breaths of February and the eventual warmth of April. The air is still brisk enough to warrant a jacket but lacks the icy teeth to demand a coat and a scarf. The snow has abandoned its campaign to conquer the world and appears content to defend its strongholds away from the sidewalks and roads where the green happy grass also begins to shake off its winter layers. People seem to be more pleasant around March 1st. I think this is because somehow they sense that the equinox...
...epidemic among girls forbidden to wear head scarves, a hamlet cut off from the outside world by a forbidding blizzard, the sensuality of the momentary union of lovers’ hands held underneath a table: such are the interwoven motifs in the captivating imagistic web of “Snow,” the most recent novel of 2006 Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk.Defying genre constraints, “Snow” is, on one hand, a depiction of the contemporary political realities of a country that geographically straddles the border between the East and West—a polity divided...