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Word: exists (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...level where they would play shows, but they don’t know how.” With knowledge pooled, everyone would ideally know how to get booked at campus venues.OPENING THE CAGEOne possible fly in CARAR’s ointment is their supposition that steady venues exist around campus, which is far from assured. While performance opportunities at Pub Nights and house-sponsored coffeehouses ensure that this assumption is not completely unfounded, the Quincy Cage remains the most reliable stage for many Harvard bands. While the Cage’s management has been admired for all of recent memory...

Author: By Eric L. Fritz, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Does Harvard Have an Appetite for Rock and Roll? | 10/13/2005 | See Source »

Well you can’t, or at least not fully. But if success is to be rewarded, differences in the quality of schools have to be acknowledged. The reasons rankings exist at all is due to a great public need for information. If some colleges are better than others, how exactly is an uninformed person supposed to compare them? One might say that colleges must be judged subjectively or by how well they match individual preferences. But it’s difficult for prospective students to know what they want in a college, and so they are content with...

Author: By Sahil K. Mahtani | Title: Let a Hundred Rankings Bloom | 10/13/2005 | See Source »

...enough; travel policies should be made even more liberal. The current blanket restrictions for the 15 countries in question should have an exception procedure whereby students can apply to get credit and funding for travel and programs in restricted areas on a case-by-case basis. Such procedures already exist at peer institutions like Yale, whose system of restriction waivers allows students to explore normally restricted opportunities by petition. Harvard should ensure that students demonstrate their understanding of the risks involved and perhaps talk to some sort of adviser to make sure they have exhausted alternative options to travel...

Author: By Piotr C. Brzezinski, Adam M. Guren, and N. KATHY Lin, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERSS | Title: A Worthy Exception | 10/12/2005 | See Source »

...certain at-risk patients. Especially for these patients, doctors are more reluctant to use tPA immediately. They want to see if symptoms will get better on their own,” Smith said. When symptoms improve early on for stroke victims, the blockage in the artery may still exist while the affected part of the brain borrows blood from other areas, Smith said. As Smith explained, strokes are caused by lack of blood flow to part of the brain, usually when an artery is blocked by a blood clot. This part of the brain dies and can lead to paralysis...

Author: By Stephen R. Narain, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Stroke Drugs Underused | 10/12/2005 | See Source »

...living-wage proponents inextricably yet fatefully marry the two previously separate notions. Once the notions of monetary and human worth have been linked—be it in the minds of students, workers, or living-wage advocates—the consequence is stark. As long as there ultimately exists some difference in monetary worth between Harvard’s lowest-paid workers and other members of the community (and there surely will), so too will there exist a rift in the human worth accorded to members of each of those two groups.The notion is more intuitive than the formal argument...

Author: By Vivek G. Ramaswamy, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Uncounted Costs of a Living Wage | 10/12/2005 | See Source »

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