Word: summers
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...worst time of year for crops. The local climate makes growing anything but squash and root vegetables impossible, so we’re forced to look elsewhere for produce. According to Ted Mayer, HUDS’ Executive Director, “When we planned the menu back in the summer, we accommodated for this annual rise in produce prices”—by limiting fresh fruit options and vegetables like spinach, brussel sprouts and summer squash, for example—“as per usual.” However, unexpected food price increases have made this year?...
...performs. To keep the reader thoroughly engaged, many chapters experiment with forms other beyond plain prose. For example, Alex Gregory, a cartoonist for The New Yorker, contributes two brilliant cartoons about situations in which technology has harmed relationships. David Wain, co-writer of “Wet Hot American Summer,” offers a script about a guy trying to date a woman who keeps blowing him off. Tom McCarthy, an actor and writer who has appeared in movies like “Meet The Parents,” delivers one of the most touching chapters. It consists...
...data from the planning process and discussions and consultations with citizens from Medford,” said Kate Flitcher, the MBTA supervisor of the project. She said she hopes that residents from the surrounding communities will attend the next set of meetings scheduled for some time in early summer. These meetings are just one part of an 18-month process to finalize the plans. At this point, the project is about five months-old and has already proved controversial. Fitcher described the future location of the T stop as a “touchy subject.” Somerville Mayor...
...angry but that he wasn't angry enough. His party's more inflamed activists wanted a candidate who would burn bridges, not build them. If primaries are about winning the base, Obama's conciliatory approach could not have been more out of tune, and by last summer, he looked as if he might fizzle. His crowds were huge, and the money rolled in, but weeks went by, and he couldn't get traction. In debates, he seemed not to know what he was doing. "You could say he wasn't very good at debates," said a longtime supporter, "but that...
...looking increasingly likely that Democrats in Florida and Michigan are going to have a do-over of their primaries, so that their 366 delegates - who could be enough to tip the nomination one way or the other - can be seated at this summer's Democratic National Convention in Denver. The big questions now: How would they do it, and who would...