Word: cooperating
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...cute-but-hackneyed material like this as well. It’s why they ended “Sex and the City” before the girls got pre-menopausal. The flick also creates a batch of likeable secondary characters—including Tripp’s BFFs (Bradley Cooper, “Wedding Crashers” and Justin Bartha, “National Treasure”) and Paula’s slightly unhinged roommate (indie darling Zooey Deschanel of “The Good Girl”)—adding an intelligent quirkiness that helps...
...affairs, security issues, and social, political, and economic challenges. And Peru’s former ambassador to the U.S. Ricardo A. Luna will conduct a group on the five Andean countries—Bolivia, Ecuador, Columbia, Peru, and Venezuela. In addition, former Boston Globe national editor Kenneth J. Cooper will host a study group entitled “Black and Brown Together Forever? Black Latino Coalition Politics in the 21st century.” And former 9/11 Commission spokesman Alvin S. Felzenberg will examine “the possibilities of bipartisan cooperation at a time of great political division...
...Studies in Economics and Senior Lecturer Jeffery Wolcowitz said that the department has no control over when professors schedule midterms. “There is no set policy on when students can take their midterms. It is up to the individual professor,” Wolcowitz said. Richard N. Cooper, Boas professor of international economics, who teaches Economics 1530, “International Monetary Economics,” said that to be fair he would not change the date of the midterm. “I think that horizontal equity in a class of this size is extremely important...
...position open in Currier House. Raymond L. Palmer Jr. ’07 and Christopher M. Pak ’07 are running unopposed in Winthrop and Mather respectively. Currier’s vacancy will be filled by either Eric I. Kouskalis ’07 or Joseph K. Cooper ’07. Leverett and Eliot will have three candidates for each spot: Benjamin S. Decker ’08, Matthew S. Fasman ’08, and Edward Y. Lee ’08 for Leverett; and Thomas D. Hadfield ’08, Harrison R. Greenbaum...
...stop him, he'll ignore them too. This wasn't quibbling or spinning. Like the old English kings who insisted that Parliament could not tell them what to do, Bush all but declared himself above a law he signed. One professor who specializes in this constitutional area, Phillip J. Cooper of Portland State University in Oregon, has described the power grabs as "breathtaking...