Word: forks
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...premier classes of the undergraduate Harvard education, will face a fork in the road this fall when Baker Professor of Economics Martin S. Feldstein ’61 ends his 21-year stint atop the course. Handing the reins to Freed Professor of Economics N. Gregory Mankiw, the economics department has chosen the correct path for the course, regardless of the gripes of liberal opponents. Ec 10 undoubtedly presents a conservative view of the world to its many students, but it is a classical economic approach. Thus, Mankiw’s intention to inherit the course and teach it with...
Abrams, who has met with Zuckerberg, sees TheFacebook reaching that crucial fork in the road...
...members in 14 states and the District of Columbia. The firms range from ambitious outfits like Zipcar and Flexcar, which are each adding as many as 1,000 members a month, to modest start-ups like the Dancing Rabbit Vehicle Co-operative in Rutledge, Mo., and Roaring Fork Vehicles in Aspen, Colo. Zipcar and Flexcar, zealous rivals, both say they will break even for the first time next month, even while they are preparing to expand into new markets from Chicago to Denver and Minneapolis. Across the U.S., car-sharing membership and revenues are expected to grow tenfold over...
...never been too big a fan of dining manners. Obtuse rules about the way you should hold your fork or whether to switch hands when you cut seem to be pretty irrelevant when we consider all the other things we could be spending our time on. But even for the most relaxed amongst us, there are certain rules so inviolable that to break them is to be cast out from the dining hall community faster (alright, much faster) than a chickwich comes off the grill. Thus, in order to promote harmony and a better relationship between all eaters, I present...
...risqué disrobement of Primal Scream. We like to think these quirks add to a sense of camaraderie and community—essential to the experience of every college student. And there was a time when every Harvard student had the opportunity to annually don a bib, clutch a fork and impale his or her very own large, red crustacean. It was known as the Harvard Clambake or, more informally, as Lobster Night. But that time is gone...