Word: wearings
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...first appearance for Faiola, a former co-MVP of the prestigious Cape Cod League, since going 12 innings in an epic 2-1 loss to Yale on April 22. In that start, he threw 145 pitches.Haviland said the Crimson won’t expect Faiola to show signs of wear.“Sometimes you throw 145 and have no stress,” he said, “and sometimes you throw 65 with all kinds of stress—you’re rearing back. So it’s different...
...said that jail was inadequate preparation for the real world. “Locking people up is the new slavery,” she said. “Incarceration fosters dependence on the system because you don’t have a choice of what to wear and what to eat. Jail doesn’t prepare you for dealing with society.” Hall, like Williams, said she too faced extreme culture-shock. “I didn’t know where to live and how to get a job,” Hall said...
...sink present with adequate soap and paper towels.Fallon and Sullivan explain that sometimes things pile on the sinks, which discourages workers from coming over to wash their hands.But employee hygiene does not just stop at hair-tying and hand-washing. Any employee working with food is not supposed to wear jewelry, except a plain wedding band.“Food can get stuck underneath rings or in bracelets, and it can get in the next dish,” says Sullivan, who added that jewelry can also get caught in machinery, resulting in serious injury. Square restaurants 9 Tastes, Spice...
...night - and after dining, about 45 minutes is set aside for the "get-together," which is a time for casual conversation and community. Although a few Opus Dei priests live in the residence and are instantly identifiable by their robes and clerical collars, other Opus Dei members (or fellows) wear no identifying garb or insignias and are thus almost indistinguishable from the tutors, visitors, workers or anyone else who may come and go in the facility. Some of the fellows wear blue jeans and sports jackets. Neckties are uncommon, which lends the place an informal...
Harvard is an amazing place to be a student athlete—just ask any student who makes the sacrifices necessary to wear a jersey, singlet, unisuit, or jacket with “Harvard” stiched on it. But the separation between athletics and academics need not span the Charles. As University Hall reexamines its core curriculum and social programming, it ought to more clearly understand the athletic lifestyle and the ever-changing needs of student-athletes as well...