Word: calendar
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...know the Crimson has the two Dartmouth doubleheaders already circled on its calendar (April 28 and 29). Even with the departure of perennial Harvard-killer Will Bashelor, the strength of the Big Green still lies in its outfield, with sweet-swinging junior Damon Wright and rookie Nick Santomauro...
...newspaper, which is to be circulated on a bi-weekly basis beginning in early April, will include a regular historical column by Mathews—who promises an examination of the history of the notorious Mather Lather dance—as well as a social calendar, features on student art, and possibly some jokes from Jeremy A. Cypen ’09, whose is known throughout the House for his habit of e-mailing a joke of the day to the Mather Open e-mail list...
Like Helvenston, Berman had been a Navy seal. The two had never served together but knew each other. Helvenston had modeled in a Navy seals calendar Berman had produced, and Berman had helped sell fitness videos that Helvenston had made. Before Helvenston died, said Berman, the two had been thinking of starting a rock-climbing business together. Neither man had discussed going to work for Blackwater before they literally ran into each other boarding the same plane at John Wayne Airport in Santa Ana, Calif. By coincidence, they were both heading to Moyock, N.C., for a 10-day Blackwater training...
...significance of Earth Day as a day “to celebrate the earth and realize that it’s an amazing place and also to recognize and become more informed about how we should treat it.” So break out your Birkenstocks and mark your calendar (or actually, use iCal, it wastes less paper...
...Line. That sent their avionics into a electronic tailspin. GPS receivers on the planes use signals from orbiting satellites to determine their location, altitude and speed, and require precise time and dates to work. "The International Date Line is the imaginary line on the Earth that separates two consecutive calendar days," the U.S. Naval Observatory says on its website. "That is, the date in the Eastern hemisphere, to the left of the line, is always one day ahead of the date in the Western hemisphere... Without the International Date Line travelers going westward would discover that when they returned home...