Word: caters
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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However, the misguided stereotyping of other students can be overlooked. The policies of the Ivy League cannot. Officially ordering athletes not to practice is unfair and discriminatory, as are accusations of lenient policies towards athletes. Harvard admissions does not cater to athletes any more than it caters to other standouts in any field. Ivy League schools seek a well-rounded student body—as Princeton Dean of Admissions Fred Hargadon put it, “You can’t have all brass and no strings” in your school’s band. Furthermore, student athletes...
...however, will cater primarily to students seeking academic programs abroad, according to Associate Dean for Undergraduate Education Jeffrey Wolcowitz...
Though they cater to a clientele that's officially communist, China's restaurateurs are canny practitioners of free-market competition. Price wars, negative advertising?virtually anything goes. But in the eastern Chinese city of Tangshan, capitalism has morphed into mass murder. Someone sprinkled rat poison on breakfast treats served at the Heshengyuan Soy Milk snack shop in Tangshan, killing at least 40 people and sickening 300 more. The alleged culprit, arrested by local police, is a rival whose eatery suffered because the Heshengyuan snack shop was more popular. Such culinary skulduggery isn't new: earlier this summer the owner...
...memorable cast of characters who have helped to make Nice such a troubled paradise. Kanigel doesn't see a quiet future for the city. Each day at this time of year 170 flights pile into one of Europe's busiest airports. A thousand hotels and 3,000 restaurants cater for the arrivals, who will spend at least $5 billion this year. Most it is true, leave satisfied. But tourism is a delicate beast and, as Kanigel gently points out, Nice has all but exhausted its resources - environment, physical capacity, attractions. Growth is no longer an option. Nice either stabilizes...
...Their sound did cater to a hip crowd. They played in small bars and clubs, but the bars were always full,” said his wife of four months, Nina E. Fuchs, whom he met while in Berlin...