Word: fitly
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...will continue to go on as long it continues to make money, he says.“We don’t know if it will be five years or nine.”JOCK OF ALL TRADESChristiane Cuse says that at Harvard, Cuse didn’t really fit into any one specific category.“He was a jock, but he wasn’t a jock. He was in Eliot House, but not that preppy. He was more like an all-around person,” she says.And during his college days, she adds, Cuse already...
...wrote her book,” writes Vogel, “therefore giving a one-sided point of view while ignoring other viewpoints. The question was whether a tenured faculty should not give a balanced view, making use of all the evidence instead of selecting only information to fit one’s theory.”Others, according to White, thought that she had published too little to be tenured: “Some seniors supported her, one or two were hostile to it as I remember, and I suspect the bulk, like me, voted on the grounds that...
...term “rookie” doesn’t quite fit with what Lily Lorentzen did this year. The 10-1 record in dual matches? Nope. The double honor of All-American and Ivy League Player of the Year? Nah. The individual national championship and the season-ending No. 1 ranking that goes along with it? Definitely not. In fact, about the only thing that tips you off that Lorentzen is a freshman is the ’09 on the Harvard squash team roster—that and the Ivy League Rookie of the Year award...
...Black Jack, Mo., made national headlines late last month when it drew its firm line. An unmarried couple with three children tried to move into the house they had just bought. The house is zoned for single family residences-and the city decided this family does not fit their legal definition of family. The couple pleaded with the city council to change the law. The city said no, and intends to evict. When this news broke, many assumed Black Jack must be one of those white, religious conservative towns in the Bible Belt. But Black Jack turned...
Dannon believes that healthy yogurt can fit comfortably under the convenience umbrella, and it is spending $60 million in advertising to educate consumers about the health and digestive benefits of probiotics--and make them more aware of Dannon's Activia and probiotic drink DanActive. Dairy groups in Europe, where probiotics are well established, see the segment as a major driver of growth over the next few years. "Yoplait will understand the success of Activia and follow soon," says Dannon CEO Juan Carlos Dalto. It's not every CEO who invites competition, but here's his logic: "You don't need...