Word: arms
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...ability to handle complex and sensitive issues will serve Harvard well in the coming months,” said Summers. In overseeing University finance, Mora will face many of the challenges Berman tackled during her tenure. The Faculty of Arts and Sciences, the University’s largest arm, is projected for face a $100 million deficit by 2010. And Harvard is gearing up for a costly campus expansion to Allston. Mora, in a statement yesterday, said, “With the assistance and support of the highly talented senior team in Financial Administration, I am confident that the University?...
...different level of your consciousness. They help you get insight on what you would miss if you were logically awake,” Castillo says, and describes spells as prayers with extra props. Castillo last cast a spell nearly three months ago when a friend’s arm started hurting. “I did it in the shower. The constant noise of the water helps me,” he says. Castillo also writes his own rituals and prays to a shrine of representations of God in his room. But being a witch can be lonely without Wiccan...
...comparable to her own.“It’s great they think of me as the big hitter,” Bock says. “But that’s not fair—we have two great pitchers, and [Reichling] brings so much with her arm and speed.”Despite her humility, the fact remains that her bat has taken her far to this point in training. Allard expects her to split time at catcher and possibly start at designated hitter. Bock just wants any shot.“I’m going...
...expect a lot out of Shelly and a lot out of Amanda—and they’re ready,” Allard says. Senior Michele McAteer will be the lone upperclassman on the staff, which went without her leadership last season. Pitching just 13 games due to arm trouble, McAteer says she is thrilled to be back in the circle, and is hoping to avoid a recurrence of her injury. “I spent a lot of the fall just making sure I wasn’t going to get hurt again,” McAteer says...
...wishes to be a truly Asian conference it can hardly afford to ignore South Asia, and particularly India,” said Siddhartha Sinha ’07, co-director of the Harvard College Asia Business Forum (HCABF), HPAIR’s newer business arm. He said that having the forum in India would allow delegates to understand the unique challenges that Indian businesses face and consider how India’s growing economy and affluence will play out on the international stage. The forum in Mumbai will feature six different panels—entrepreneurship, brand building, pharmaceuticals, outsourcing, foreign...