Word: stared
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Sitting there on the top bench, though, watching his twenty-nine players stare holes into O’Donnell Field, Walsh’s thoughts were far closer to home than they were to Omaha...
...preparation for Mather Lather. 2. Whenever an incredibly stereotypical character appears. Surly Europeans of all shapes and sizes abound. 3. For each sighting of the “Tom Cruise Face.” You know; the one where he opens his mouth slightly, puts on a dead stare and breathes heavily. 4. Every time you see Jon Voight, because the only way to comprehend that this man co-produced Angelina Jolie is to be heavily intoxicated. 5. Every time that damn theme song starts playing in the background. This would also be a good time to burn Fred Durst...
...changers, to its gates. This is a strength that demands our attention and our maximal effort to cultivate it. With the support of the University, Harvard can jump to the head of the pack in a growing movement to offer leadership development programs to undergraduates. Then, perhaps, we can stare our shortcomings in the face and know that we have done better—done best—elsewhere.Michael B. Broukhim ’07, a Crimson editorial chair, is a social studies concentrator in Dunster House. He is the business manager of the Leadership Institute...
...packing his bags for Cambridge, but the folks he’s met abroad have a different reaction. “If I mentioned it to the majority of the people I’ve met over the past eight months, I’d get a blank stare. They are far more impressed if I say a few phrases in their native language.” Melvoin’s brother, Nicholas J. Melvoin ’08, traveled with his brother to Chile and Easter Island this spring break, and he says he’s looking forward...
...you’re worried about how food industry lobbyists have corrupted the government’s dietary guidelines, fret no more: Harvard has created its own food pyramid! In 2005, the USDA replaced its 1992 food pyramid with a new version, which Walter C. Willett, Frederick John Stare Professor of Epidemiology and Nutrition, dubbed “a complete joke.” The pyramid’s recommendations (heavy on dairy, meat, and grains) are rife with political undertones, according to Jami M. Snyder, Communications Coordinator of Harvard University Dining Services (HUDS). “It?...