Word: daniells
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Anthropology professor Daniel E. Lieberman ’86 said the field of biological anthropology has diverged drastically in methodology and focus from the curriculum’s current archaeology and social anthropology tracks, which lie in the social sciences...
...smattering of unknown but photogenic kids. Prince Charles' deadpan double act with the frog betrays the relish for thespian activities that enticed him to star in amateur dramatics as an undergraduate at Cambridge University. His sons William and Harry drafted a couple of mates - James Bond star Daniel Craig and soul diva Joss Stone - into the lineup, and also put in an appearance themselves. With such a proliferation of princes, the frog - present in every frame - remains unkissed, though it does get to nestle on Harrison Ford's shoulder, inspire Robin Williams to mimicry and share the screen with...
...face of it, the two events might seem unconnected. After months of government criticism and a slew of ugly headlines, Daniel Bouton announced last week that he plans to quit as chairman of Société Générale, one of France's biggest banks. A day earlier, a meeting of shareholders in banking giant Fortis turned nasty when investors riled by the sale of ts recently nationalized Belgian banking arm lobbed shoes and other items at chairman Jozef De Mey. De Mey stood his ground, and won an eventual vote on the sale. But the twin...
...both genders were well represented in the audience, and Locker directly addressed the men as well, giving them advice on how to last longer during sex. “I think it’s good to get a dialogue going about sex on campus,” Daniel F. Selgrade ’12 said after the seminar. “Women don’t get what they want.” Locker also mentioned the importance of safe sex. With a volunteer holding a rubber penis prop, Locker gave a descriptive step-by-step demonstration...
...Daniel R. Pecci ’09 is interested in what we think of as theater—and how he can expand the definition. The active member of Harvard theater began his creative exploration as a child, when he would orchestrate what he calls “haunted hayrides.” “We would create enormous spider webs, pyramids and pick-up trucks filled with hay,” he says. His play “Black-eyed Susanna,” written in his senior year of high school, won the Phyllis Anderson Prize...