Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...even ambulance drivers, could move easily in the crowd. Athletes sat in the sidewalks or streets; their families gathered around the bulletin board where the times were posted (almost 20 runners from Cambridge finished the race in less than three-and-a-half hours); the police had to escort away pedestrians who simply refused to move. One group of students roared in triumphant cheer the Notre Dame fight song. Families set up picnic lunches on the sidewalk outside Lord and Taylor to catch the sunlight. Other spectators waited along the finish line to cheer on the marathoners for more than...
...seemed harmless enough. The Britain-based Computer Fraud & Security Bulletin sponsored a "Think Like a Thief contest, encouraging readers to compete for a ?100 ($215) prize by inventing plans for a computer-related fraud. But now there are international repercussions. In his winning entry, published in the Bulletin, Leslie Goldberg pinpointed an apparently fatal flaw in a new security technique recently proposed by major British banks and being considered by their foreign counterparts...
...School currently publishes The Adviser, primarily consiting of current events and announcements, the HLS Bulletin, and an alumni newsletter, and The Record, a weekly law student newspaper...
...member of Mensa, a group of 33,000 people who have IQ scores in the top 2%, Graham first revealed his project last summer in an interview published in the Mensa Bulletin. He was seeking to place his Nobel sperm with bright women who were healthy, under 35 and preferably married to a sterile man. Two dozen wom en applied, and those who were chosen received physical descriptions of the anonymous Nobel donors-plus Graham's own assessments. "A very famous scientist," he wrote on the description of one of the five available mail-order fathers (to whom...
While Fowler's reasoning may leave some readers skeptical, his attention to Harvard's and Boston's past adds a dimension that should appeal to those interested in local history. He teaches a course on the city, and his bulletin board, covered with Red Sox bumper stickers and posters of Boston, reflects his love for the city. The Baron of Beacon Hill traces Boston's development from a network of cowpaths into a matrix of cobblestone streets leading to the suburbs just beginning to spring up. Fowler also describes a visit, not unlike one last fall, by John Carroll...