Word: fines
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Libertine. Platinum is the new Marie-Antoinette. Leather is the new luxury. Veiling is the new seduction. Dior is the new Erotica.” Written on a wall in Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts (MFA), designer John Galliano’s words sound more like one of Will Ferrell’s lines in “Zoolander” than an artistic credo.But Galliano’s words—shown next to his spring 2006 haute couture collection for iconic fashion house Christian Dior—are displayed with sober seriousness...
...though. “The only good thing that came out of it was that the homework was extended,” she said. Despite the difficulties encountered yesterday, many students are still satisfied with Harvard’s FAS server system. “It works mighty fine,” said Toomas Laarits ’10. Nettifee offered reassurance to students concerned about possible future technology problems. “We are constantly working to improve the services that we offer,” Nettifee said. —Anton S. Troianovski contributed to the reporting...
...foster parents on junior foster parents weekend—our competitors’ shortcomings are so obvious that we can’t help but intervene. These idiots think that just because they’re taking folks around a seventeenth century institution,- it’s fine to use tour technology of yesteryear. We have one question for these “entrepreneurs”: where are the SEGWAYS? And why bother speaking over the crowd when you can just relay points of interest via Bluetooth headsets...
...mail every day saying I’m over my disk quota.” Both Google and Microsoft claim that the current versions of their program packages are free, though Microsoft requires that institutions use their identity data management system. Google’s fine print reads that the free offer extends only to those schools that enroll during the beta trial period. Harvard’s Levine, however, said that he has privacy concerns if off-campus servers were used to store data. Levine also said that he would want to ensure that FAS retained legal rights...
There is a fine line between subjectivity and systematic exclusivity, and the comments documented by Golden attest to how easily the former can lead to the latter when the process loses transparency and accountability. We sacrifice meritocracy because of our belief in the merit of diversity, but it is our responsibility to ensure that this diversity is not used to justify a convenient elitism...