Word: t-shirt
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...their team colors, which proved a problem when a race official questioned them on their colors.Despite the adversity, the team known as Schwingg was grabbing plenty of attention. In addition to the heat lineups, the name was featured along with the rest of the clubs competing on the Regatta t-shirt.“People would look at back and say ‘Who are they?’” Rose said. “‘Maybe they’re Scandinavian.’”Rose ran into some friends from...
...promise of something new and cool. Sometimes the sender is describing a product that's suddenly generating local buzz, like lipstick-size aromatherapy tubes in New Zealand or cone-shaped pizza in Italy. Other times it's an innovative retail concept, like customized-candy shops in Australia or American T-shirt "delis" where designs are personalized like sandwiches. The correspondence comes in from trendspotters everywhere--a coffee shop in Istanbul or a library in Taipei--all part of Evers' network of more than 7,000 volunteers, most of whom have never met--and will never meet--their boss. "I call...
...agreed that it was for a good cause and added that EWC is “very much a bonding activity. It builds House spirit.” The Eliot suite residents are each receiving free tickets to the show and a Nalgene bottle and t-shirt. EWC was started in 1970 when John Misha Petkevich ’71, a figure skater and former Eliot resident, met a group of children being treated for leukemia. Within a few weeks, he organized the first EWC, welcoming national figure skaters to perform at Harvard to raise money for the Jimmy Fund...
...can’t believe you have an Ivy League degree.” This is just one drop in a veritable ocean of hate mail received by the founders of Hard Guy Tees, a line of t-shirts inspired by Dartmouth frat life and launched this summer by two Dartmouth alums. The shirts, which feature slogans such as “Hard Guy Gambling: Five bullets, six chambers” and “Hard Guy Dating: Having a girlfriend and not even liking her,” have drawn a steady stream of criticism. Robert J. Zangrilli...
...staffer at the Malkin Athletic Center (MAC) that I wasn’t allowed to wear jeans while using the equipment because “it wears down the fabric on the seats.” I was left wondering what the differences are between a 100 percent cotton t-shirt and a 100 percent cotton pair of denim jeans, since the former must touch the fabric of those machines hundreds of times a day. If places like the MAC are just going to make arbitrary rules, they should at least think up more creative excuses...