Word: fatherã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...together, and that despite his unwillingness to bring heavy bags, he always carried with him a guitar and a typewriter. “He would sit and type away,” she said. Although he led a busy lifestyle, she added, he was a “good father?? and wanted his home to be a place where people could “exchange ideas.” The former professor is remembered by many as both a friendly teacher and colleague. Matory said he was “encouraging,” remembering a time when...
...first opened the doors of Harvard Book Store—then located on what is now called JFK Street—in 1932.“It was a used bookstore primarily,” says his son, Frank S. Kramer, who took over ownership after his father??s death in 1962. “And my mother joined him in the business after a couple of years and they ran that bookstore, which was really a pretty small bookstore, all used books. Just two people running the store and probably my father?...
...cannot do the same, because I have yet to find myself, and my weird family is actually weird. While I could talk about the film canister filled with leafy greens I was given over Christmas break by an extended family member or the tears that spill out of my father??s eyes whenever he watches “Bigfoot,” “Swiss Family Robinson,” or any other movie not worth crying over, what I really want to talk about is how my family loves to be naked...
...host former Iranian President Mohammad Khatami, including in a radio ad released just last month. But at a campaign event held last night at Emerson Hall and attended by roughly 30 Romney supporters, Tagg Romney, the eldest of the five Romney sons, said he did not feel that his father??s comments have had much impact on how Harvard students viewed the elder Romney—now a leading Republican presidential candidate. Tagg Romney, a 1998 graduate of the Business School and a senior advisor to his father??s campaign, said there was an unspoken undercurrent...
...store in 1932 with $300 borrowed from his father. Since then, it has expanded from a 600-square-foot room to a 5,500-square-foot institution. Frank Kramer has run the store for the past 45 years, taking over the business as a 20-year-old after his father??s unexpected death. Murphy, who opened the dedication, praised how far the store has come, but also how much Frank Kramer and the store have given back to the community by serving in groups such as the Harvard Square Business Association and sponsoring “Cambridge Reads...