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Word: wild (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...writer Caroline Thompson first discussed their ideas for a movie about a boy with scissors for hands, they figured they'd need songs to push the audience into the fantasy mood the story required. That didn't happen; the authors decided to trust the audience to take this wild ride with them, and Burton summoned all resources of movie magic - his own seductive sense of ethereal weirdness, Bo Welch's gift for parodying suburban architecture, most crucially Johnny Depp's gorgeous otherness - to make Edward Scissorhands sing. No lyrics needed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Edward Scissordance | 3/22/2007 | See Source »

...what if it’s 10 months away? Strap in, come January and league play. It should be a wild ride...

Author: By Ted Kirby, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: KIRBY'S DREAMLAND: ’08 Ivy Race Could Be Historic | 3/21/2007 | See Source »

Although nothing like the radical transformation Charlie Sheen’s famous “Wild Thing” character experienced in the classic baseball movie “Major League,” the history of Harvard baseball players undergoing mid-career optic improvement is more extensive than one would think...

Author: By Jonathan Lehman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: BASEBALL '07: Catcher and the Eyes | 3/20/2007 | See Source »

...Dyke Ball, 11 students were hospitalized for alcohol poisoning. The media used these hospitalizations as an excuse to publish scores of eroticized, disapproving reports of Wellesley life. The Boston Herald went so far as to grace its front page with the headline, “Wellesley Girls Gone Wild: college students end night in ER after lesbian bash.” By contrast, only pitiable coverage was provided by local media when, months earlier, more than 25 students were hospitalized for alcohol poisoning at the Harvard-Yale football game...

Author: By Stephen C. Bartenstein | Title: Wellesley Exposed | 3/18/2007 | See Source »

...best thing we can do to let bison be bison is to end their lives in the wild, not in captivity. Today, John and Wright Mooar, the prodigious bison hunting brothers who helped lead the "Great Slaughter" in the late 1800s, are reviled for shooting so many bison on the open range. But, ironically, theirs was a more humane way of killing bison than ours. Last summer, I watched a bison heifer be led into the chute at the North American Bison Cooperative, a slaughterhouse in New Rockford, N.D. She became agitated, and she fought violently against the tight steel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why the Buffalo Roam | 3/15/2007 | See Source »

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