Word: exceeding
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Most of us are well acquainted with annoying e-mails from the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) e-mail servers complaining our inboxes are over quota. Although our official storage space is around 200 megabytes, our e-mail folders cannot exceed 50 percent of that. And even worse, our inbox is limited to 40 megabytes. In these times of free unlimited storage, when companies like Google boast "never delete e-mail again" slogans, our FAS services are unacceptably limited...
...whom are leaders in some respect—can tap enough into their own optimism and passion to recognize the significance of their current situation and what it demands of their leaders. Amadi Anene and Kyle de Beausset are two people who can meet and exceed these demands, helping Harvard to realize all that it is and all that...
...Jean Charles who are hurting. The glut is hitting producers everywhere, particularly in Australia, where a local success story has quickly soured. According to estimates by the Australian Wine and Brandy Corporation (AWBC), the government body that oversees the wine industry, the country now has surplus wine stocks that exceed an entire year of exports, and many grape growers simply left this year's crop on the vine rather than harvest it. In France, a massive support system subsidizes producers who can't sell their wine, and it is cushioning the impact somewhat. Even so, revenues and incomes overall have...
...Turkey, China, Brazil--that the world is currently awash in the stuff. In 2004 worldwide production hit its highest level in 20 years, almost 300 million hectoliters, or 15% more than the previous year. The glut is hurting producers everywhere, particularly in Australia, which has surplus wine stocks that exceed a year's worth of exports. Many grape growers there simply let this year's crop rot on the vine rather than harvest...
...freshman candidates who are getting the electoral urge. First-years are also going to the polls—that is, the UC website—in greater numbers than their more grizzled elders. In 2005, turnout topped 50 percent in every freshman district. No upperclass House saw turnout exceed 43 percent—and at the lowest extreme, less than 28 percent of Dunsterites bothered to vote, according to statistics from the UC Election Commission. Jay Anderson ’09, a member of the six-person commission, ascribes such impressive voter turnouts to the freshmen candidates’ concerted...