Word: bits
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...coming up with an idea with so much ingenuity,” says donor Neagheen Homaifar ’10. Even with their goal as of yet unreached, the Circle of Women is already seeing results: construction of the school began a few weeks ago. Successfully building the school bit by bit, the group is pleased with the difference their effort is starting to make. Co-founder Britt Caputo ’08 says of the process, “As a small group of friends we can actually make an impact on the community of women in Afghanistan that...
...course, could be answered, with a bit of persistence and some quality time on Google. But the question lingered. Am I not only avoiding the finance superhighway, but actually any real road out of the Ivory Tower altogether? More worrisome still, am I making a huge mistake...
...forced to call a delay. “It could have been very stressful, but our boat was able to stay focused, relax, and they didn’t let that bother them,” Woodbin-Maynard said. “They got to practice a little bit. Princeton just sat there. They didn’t practice or move around.” Next week Radcliffe will return home to race on the Charles against MIT as the team gears up for EAWRC Sprints. “That’s the big, big focus that we?...
...Riffs are all about timing and sequence, and to get people into stitches you need to keep ’em coming. The writers of these films seem to be hyper-conscious of this fact—and the effect is that they can leave the viewer in a bit of a comedic haze upon viewing. I remember leaving “Knocked Up” amused, not remembering what exactly was funny but knowing that something surely was. The same thing goes for the latest out of Apatow’s plant, “Forgetting Sarah Marshall...
...give us wisdom" or "With God's help." But they didn't make a habit of it. In fact, five of the eight Presidents during this period concluded this way in less than 30% of their speeches. Harry Truman, Lyndon Johnson and Ford did so a bit more often, but still none of these Presidents concluded even half of his addresses this way. Reagan, on the other hand, ended 90% of his major addresses by requesting divine guidance. George H. W. Bush also did so in 90% of his speeches, and Bill Clinton and George W. Bush followed suit...