Word: foote
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...popularity of online book buying, Kramer said in an interview after the ceremony that his family’s business is going strong. Kramer said that his father Mark founded the 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...
...steep down slope on the green, prevented anyone putting from above the hole to stop the ball close to the cup. “Some of these hole positions were borderline unfair,” Shuman said. “Anyone above the hole was looking at a six-foot comebacker up the hill [just to save a two-putt].” According to Shuman, tournament officials moved the hole location before the women’s field began playing the hole. Though Harvard managed to improve with a second-round 313 for a two-day team score...
Love, transformation, and a twenty-foot pool? Ovid never saw that last part coming. The Harvard-Radcliffe Dramatic Club (HRDC) opens its first Loeb Mainstage show of the year, Mary Zimmerman’s adaptation of the classic “Metamorphoses,” tonight at 8 P.M. Directed by Carmel O’Reilly, co-founder of the local Súgán Theatre Company, and produced by Allison B. Kline ’09, the play is this year’s Visiting Director’s Project. Zimmerman’s adaptation is a compilation...
...Grey’s Anatomy” at the Student Organization Center at Hilles (SOCH). Munching on free popcorn and candy, the students join about 30 Quadlings in the basement of the Quad Library, where they watch the latest drama at their favorite fictional hospital unfold on a 30-foot screen. “I’ve been coming with a group of friends every week since the premiere,” said Lisa X. Jing ’10, who lives in DeWolfe, at last night’s showing. “It?...
Bhutto supporters arrived from as far away as Abbotabad in the country's northeast and Quetta, on the western border with Afghanistan. They arrived in buses and cars, on foot and by donkey cart. As dawn broke on the morning of her arrival, the crowds awoke from the highway medians where they had passed the night in hopes of getting a glimpse of a leader few had seen other than from a television screen. Babur Khan, a 28-year-old employee at the Karachi stock exchange said excitedly, "She will bring employment, she will restore democracy, and she will bring...