Word: spiced
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...indicative of their skill and speed from defense to offense. While Brown's key players characterized their team with explosive speed and shot power throughout each quarter, Harvard's women, as a unit, defined their game with methodical passing and less offensive leadership, though freshman forward Jen Gerometta added spice with her quickness and spirit...
...novel is set against a larger historical metaphor: the expulsion of the Moors from Muslim Spain in 1492. Thus, the Moor's last sigh belongs both to this earlier displaced people and to the narrator, Moraes Zogoiby, nicknamed 'The Moor'. The family spice business, nearly destroyed by the bitter squabbles of one generation, is rescued by the next and eventually transformed into a fantastic and far-reaching crime syndicate. Moraes is betrayed by a beautiful vixen, imprisoned, and then released on the condition that he go to work as a goon for his father's rival crime boss. Aurora Zogoiby...
...sought to change UHS's HIV testing policy from confidential to anonymous. We've committed ourselves to obtaining an assurance from College administrators that admissions will continue to be need-blind. We've put on a free show featuring national comedians and plan to spice up social life for all of us singles on Valentine's Day with a Datamatch survey and a dance. We've invited Dean of the College Harry R. Lewis '68 and Associate Dean of Housing Thomas A. Dingman '67 to a forum next month on housing randomization...
...Java is more than a way to spice up the pages of the World Wide Web. The news tickers and dancing cartoons are just the most visible signs of a deeper, more profound change. Although today Java matters only to programmers, it could in the next few years shift the balance of power in the entire computer industry, changing not only the cost and shape of the machines on our desktops but also our very concept of what a computer should...
...whole lot more: everything he has heard or can remember or dream up about his mother's family. The eccentric and marvelously fractious Da Gamas trace their lineage, perhaps incorrectly, to the Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama, who was the first European to reach India, thereby launching the spice trade that made the Moor's forebears wealthy. "Mine is the story of the fall from grace of a high-born cross-breed," the Moor notes, although the past "grace" he mentions consists largely of Da Gama insanities, grudges and general bad behavior. "What an epidemic of getting-even runs through...