Word: calendar
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Committees, student groups, and students themselves who made the most of a bad situation. Without their efforts, the day would have been truly wretched. Instead, it was merely a disappointing substitute for what has traditionally been one of the most exciting events of the College’s social calendar. Perhaps it was a fitting atmosphere for the defeat Harvard was soon to be dealt from a side that just knew how to play better: last year at their tailgate and this year on the field...
...Harvard as the top paper recycler in the agency’s Recyclemania competition, which includes 93 schools in 33 states, according to Recyclemania’s Web site. Harvard recycled 36.41 pounds of paper per person in the competition, which lasted 10 weeks at the beginning of the calendar year. Harvard saved nearly 25 percent more paper than the second-place finisher, Emory, which recycled 29.33 pounds per person. Gogan yesterday attributed Harvard’s high ranking to the University’s “good paper recycling infrastructure.” The record figures on bottles...
...voting record. His ticket proposed an endowment fund that could subsidize student groups.The UC members said that Hadfield will run this year with Adam Goldenberg ’08. Both are active Crimson editors on the editorial board. Hadfield contributes information to the Crimson’s online calendar, and Goldenberg currently writes the biweekly column “Sardonic Verses” and co-authors the Crimson blog “Gadfly.”Hadfield, a 24-year-old Brit, sold a soccer Web site he created as a teenager to ESPN in 1999 for 25 million British...
...colleagues describe him as a "rock star"--has unavoidably changed the very nature of the job. He is more than a mouthpiece; he's a one-man echo chamber, able to riff on the themes of the Bush presidency with a wide smile and a word-a-day-calendar vocabulary. His flamboyant style has drawn the media spotlight just a little off center, away from the President. And these days, the White House doesn't mind...
...real test will be how all six parties react once the talks resume - assuming, of course, the talks really do resume this year. (It's best to mark your calendar in pencil when you're dealing with North Korea.) U.S. Ambassador to Japan Thomas Schieffer told a group of reporters earlier this month that North Korea simply returning to the talks wouldn't be enough for the U.S. to relax sanctions - a position Hill reiterated in Beijing...