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Word: frequentative (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Verba said that the committee had heard frequent complaints from undergraduates who have had trouble getting summer jobs because Harvard lets out so late in comparison to other schools...

Author: By Joshua D. Gottlieb and Laura L. Krug, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS | Title: Calendar Gets Mixed Reviews | 3/25/2004 | See Source »

...years. Rosovsky’s review reinvigorated the faculty—still reeling from the culture shocks of the 1960s—by designing the core we know today, creating the idea of “approaches to knowledge.” Both of them garnered frequent press coverage and influenced undergraduate pedagogy nationwide. Though the core may have seen better days and undergraduate frustration with the current system is justified, these were welcome and trailblazing innovations at the time that excited faculty and students alike...

Author: By J. hale Russell, | Title: The Curricular Misnomer | 3/25/2004 | See Source »

...dogged him on NYPD Blue, the show he created with Steven Bochco. Take a group of criminals and scofflaws, mostly men, risking ruin or murder to seek their fortunes--who then blow said fortunes on hookers, craps, dope and booze--and in any century, their epithets will be frequent and stronger than "dagnabbit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: True Grit | 3/22/2004 | See Source »

...that period it provided more than poetry to the community; Grolier transformed itself from a bricks-and-mortar building into part of the soul and essence of the Cambridge neighborhood. Poets including e.e. cummings ’15, T.S. Eliot ’10 and Allen Ginsberg were once frequent visitors. And so, when Grolier closes its doors for the last time, when the last slim volume passes over the counter, the entire city will be poorer...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, | Title: The Demise of Poetry | 3/18/2004 | See Source »

...patriotism. The witnesses who spoke to the BBC - including former officials who helped run the camps as well as former inmates - identified six remote sites across Zimbabwe; each, they say, holds hundreds of people. The training, which involves not just a grueling program of physical activity but also frequent beatings and food deprivation, slowly breaks people down, then inculcates absolute loyalty to the party. Take the story of Daniel, 24, who declined to give his real name. Thickset and muscular, he slouches back in his chair as he speaks of raping girls in his camp. He had volunteered...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mugabe's Campers | 3/14/2004 | See Source »

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