Word: stuporously
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...honestly, what would you think of Harvard if the only contact you had with the students was from 2 to 5 a.m. on a relatively uneventful Saturday night, during regular Store 24 pit stops? Certainly Larry, Josie and Gwendolyn have all seen us in a drunken stupor attempting to satiate the munchies. Perhaps Larry, puts it best: "I'm sick to hell of all you Harvard students, with your guys obnoxious requests, and your ladies' inane cackling...
...technology, babies can indeed dance. The three-dimensional "Dancing Baby" has been bouncing around the Internet for about two years, wiggling its hips, dipping its head and playing air guitar to a variety of tunes. Incarnations of the baby have been seen doing gymnastic jumps, walking in a drunken stupor, smoking and urinating. One version even shows the baby dancing, then getting run over by a car. The baby made the leap from the Internet to television media in FOXs Ally McBeal this past January, taunting the title character at random moments. Viewers can also see the Dancing Baby...
...each Sunday night I returned to the room giddy with my potential force. Abby--escaping from her academic captors long enough to hear the trials and tribulations of my JCR battles, but never quite emerging from her Social Studies stupor--couldn't help but engage me in discussions about power and gender constructions. I'd like to bring her, inebriated with theory, back to the column now, for she brings an intriguing critique to what I had seen as a simple self-defense course...
...hours a day (as Cotton noted Thomas Jefferson allegedly did) prepares most students for anything other than a life of elitism and inaction is profoundly faulted. Where is the logic in supposing that people who contentedly spend four years doing nothing but classwork will suddenly rise from their undergraduate stupor and be ready (or qualified) to change the world? And where is the logic in supposing that it is possible to extricate oneself from society for long enough to graduate summa...
...glad S.C. Gwynne let those New Age nitwits have it with both barrels in his piece about the "Whole Life Expo," the country's largest holistic fair [AMERICAN SCENE, Oct. 20]. I solve my medical problems the old-fashioned American way--by drugging myself into a stupor. RUDOLPH MINGER Los Angeles