Word: blandings
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Besides Walsh, Harvard's top finishers were as follows: senior Spencer Punter (26:03, third); senior Bill Bland (26:07, fourth); and junior Doug Lanzo (26:36, 12th...
Senior William Bland led Harvard with a fifth place overall finish, recording a time...
...best argument for chile, however, is that it is ideal for invigorating low-fat, potentially bland dishes and that it is healthful, plentiful and cheap. Peppers are also in tune with the nation's changing demographics. "For most of our early history," says Chile Pepper editor DeWitt, "immigration was from central Europe -- England, Ireland, Germany -- countries not renowned for their hot and spicy cuisines. In the past half-century, immigration patterns have switched to such areas as Mexico, Asia and the Caribbean. People bring their food, and they open their markets. We go, and we like them...
REPORTERS: Ginia Bellafante, Elizabeth L. Bland, Barbara Burke, Val Castronovo, Wendy Cole, Tom Curry, Kathryn Jackson Fallon, Sophfronia Scott Gregory, Janice M. Horowitz, Jeanette Isaac, Daniel S. Levy, Michael Quinn, Andrea Sachs, Alain L. Sanders, David Seideman, David E. Thigpen, Susanne Washburn, Linda Young...
...attack on politicians is misguided when it focuses on the political operator's hedging or hesitating ways. George Washington stalled and twisted to wrest compromise from his Secretaries of State (Jefferson) and the Treasury (Hamilton). Franklin Roosevelt saved capitalism under a cover of anticapitalist rhetoric. Dwight Eisenhower, under a bland exterior, conducted what historian Fred Greenstein calls a hidden-hand presidency. Other Presidents -- from Woodrow Wilson to Jimmy Carter -- were unsuccessful because they were not politicians, were not sufficiently able to bend themselves in order to bend others...