Word: whine
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...packed the club.”While the Paradise gig might have expanded Blanks.’ following--a move critical to their success--Boch expressed more enthusiasm for the New York show performed before an audience already sold on the band’s sound. CHEESE WITH THAT WHINE?Even though the other college-aged bands found the burrito battle adequate to their artistic vision, the more ambitious Blanks. preferred an unmistakably “Harvard” forum: two days after the Paradise show, the band hosted a wine and cheese party at The Signet, ostensibly to debut...
...keystone area of the planned University expansion across the river in Allston need to shut up. They constantly complain about their impending relocation to new subsidized facilities in a housing market they frankly cannot afford. The tenants don’t own the property and have no standing to whine about walking an extra block to the bus. Or anything really.7. Tactless law professors. Closely following the death of Chief Justice William Rehnquist, Frankfurter Professor of Law Alan M. Dershowitz decided to pen a vicious piece calling the late Justice a “Republican thug” and accusing...
...social life, our housing system, our administration’s (possibly) weak commitment to the well-being of students, and the lack of cheap beer for underage kids. Now I feel guilty. I don’t hate Harvard. And the floodgates have opened: all we ever do is whine. What should...
Pappin can whine all he wants, but we welcome the media onslaught. The Salient, Harvard’s token conservative paper, should agree that competition is never a bad thing. But we do understand why Pappin felt overwhelmed. (Nude girls...
...companies' typical response to complaints about the price of prescription drugs is to cite their huge research and development costs. This amounts, Angell writes, to a veiled threat: We make these drugs that save and improve your life - don't whine that they should be cheaper, because if they were we couldn't keep discovering new ones. But Angell argues that the industry not only exaggerates the costs of bringing drugs to market but spends much more on marketing and administration than on research, which it prefers to leave to government-funded scientists, intervening only when it smells a buck...