Word: spined
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...wrinkled edges, the skin’s coloring is a subdued yellow, with sporadic brown and black splotches like an old banana. The skin is not covered in hair or marked by tattoos—except for a “Harvard Law Library” branding on its spine. Nothing about it shouts “human flesh” to the untrained...
...detail taking particular delight in the variety of people's comical facial characteristics such as broken noses, buck teeth and wide foreheads. Although the printing is clear and the lines are sharp, there are no margins around the artwork, so the panels often bleed into the gutter of the spine. Sometimes you have to press the book with the palm of your hand to read the words. Dialogue has also been carelessly allowed to overlap the edges of the balloons in some cases and sound effects have been messily overlaid on the original Korean characters. It's frustrating when...
...didn't belong to one of the world's most feared men, it would hardly scare a child. Having disappeared from view, sheltering in the mountains of Afghanistan and Pakistan, Osama bin Laden may have lost the ability to send a chill down the world's spine. Governments don't shut down airports or send security forces into red alert. Even when he makes the direst threats, we no longer feel compelled to slow down, much less stop, the course of our daily lives...
...whose style fuses traditional Celtic music and punk rock. 18+. The Middle East Upstairs. 9 p.m. $10 in advance through Ticketmaster, $12 at the door. (CEJ)Sunday, Oct. 30Violin and Piano Concert. Head over to church this Sunday and let Irina Muresanu, violinist, and Michael Lewis, pianist, make your spine tingle with gorgeous rhythm and melody. Harvard-Epworth Church, 1555 Massachusetts Ave. 5 p.m. Free. (TMN)Wynton Marsalis. Don’t miss nine-time Grammy-award-winning jazz trumpeter Wynton Marsalis who promises an unforgettable performance. Sanders Theatre. 5 p.m. Tickets available at Harvard Box Office...
...within hundreds of miles and can't get someone to prescribe to them," says executive director Will Rowe. In some cases, patients with high-dosage prescriptions are turned away by drug stores, which are also subject to DEA investigations. "It's demeaning," says Mary Vargas, a Maryland attorney whose spine was injured in an auto accident. "Pharmacists tell me they don't have the medication, only to recant and dispense it when I persist with the manager...