Word: andrews
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...language of commerce. India is also a free-market democracy with a legal system that, though frustratingly slow, is easy for Westerners to understand. The country has longstanding cultural and trade ties with the rest of the world, which adds "a comfort factor" to its business dealings overseas, says Andrew Cahn, chief executive of UK Trade & Investment, a government body that supports foreign companies looking to invest in Britain. To be sure, Indian companies occasionally run into xenophobia and protectionism. Earlier this year, Indian-born Lakshmi Mittal's $33.5 billion purchase of Arcelor, Europe's top steel producer, was initially...
...When England's Andrew Flintoff broke away from celebrations to console Brett Lee in the aftermath of last year's thrilling Second Test at Edgbaston, his gesture spoke as eloquently about Australia's moral limitations as it did of his own decency. Had the roles been reversed, would any of Ponting's men have done the same? In exchanges unseen or forgotten, Australian players since 1995 may have performed comparable acts. But the fact that Flintoff's gesture received so much attention suggests cricket fans are more familiar with displays of Australian triumphalism...
...imagine this isn't the first time Lamont has needed to have spring-cleaning in the fall. The library has been associated with anonymous gay sex since at least the mid-sixties. The writer Andrew Holleran (nee C. Eric Garber '65), in his autobiographic essay, "My Harvard," remembers the Lamont johns as a place replete with "advertisements for nude wrestling scrawled on the doors in Magic Marker." Once, "when a hand reached under the partition between the toilet stalls and stroked [his] left leg; [he] stood up, horrified, pulled [his] pants on and left." Holleran later came...
...Reviewer Andrew C. Esensten can be reached at esenst@fas.harvard.edu...
...heavy rain tomorrow, Harvard officials said it is highly unlikely that Saturday’s tailgate will be cancelled. “A little rain isn’t going to stop us from getting out on that field,” said Mather House Committee Co-Chair Andrew B. Artz ’07. The National Weather Service has predicted between one and two inches of rain tomorrow, prompting concern that soggy fields could force tailgating festivities to be rained out. There is no rain, however, forecast for Saturday. “This is the first time in institutional...