Word: toothbrushing
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...temptation to sunbathe and/or fall asleep can be overwhelming. House libraries get crowded quickly, Lamont is more conducive to people-watching and flirting than to concentrating on reading, and Widener is just too damn spooky. Cabot is strictly for the "serious" student--bring your pillow and your toothbrush and prepare to camp out for two weeks...
...have scientists managed to do all this without those protean stem cells? Part of the answer is smart engineering. Using materials such as polymers with pores no wider than a toothbrush bristle, researchers have learned to sculpt scaffolds in shapes into which cells can settle. The other part of the answer is just plain cell biology. Scientists have discovered that they don't have to teach old cells new tricks; given the right framework and the right nutrients, cells will organize themselves into real tissues as the scaffolds dissolve. "I'm a great believer in the cells. They...
Cassidy and Korn then chided Jackson for the "cussing" he did in his movies and asked him to wash his mouth out with soap and a toothbrush. Jackson willingly complied before spitting the mixture into Korn's tuxedo pocket...
...Exactly how big are we talking? Busbacher says, "I've never measured it. I'm not going to." But when pushed on the issue he admits, "I have held it up to certain objects to see how big it is. I'll hold it up to my toothbrush to see." Longer than a toothbrush? "Yea." Bushbacher does not view his special feature as a personal accomplishment. He says humbly, "If I worked at it, if through hard work it got bigger--using The Pump everyday--then I'd be 'the Man.' But it's natural--just luck...
...after begins to fall for another guy. Whether or not she will pursue him forms the show's narrative arc. Oh Baby gives us Cynthia Stevenson as a woman in her late 30s who, in the third year of a relationship with a guy who won't leave his toothbrush at her house, realizes she would do better breaking things off and getting artificially inseminated. The series is based on the personal experience of its creator, Susan Beavers, who also tried to pitch her show to the networks without success: "They'd say it was too alienating...