Word: frequently
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...line, clearly demarcating a point behind which all passengers must stand before the bus can safely depart. During off-peak hours the line is noticeable, even authoritative. Sharply contrasting with the black enameled floor of the rest of the bus, the line is hard to miss. However, if you frequent Harvard's shuttle buses only during peak hours, it would not be unusual if you hadn't noticed the line, regularly obscured by the feet of students standing on or past it, bodies tightly pressed against one another, filling buses over capacity. Nor would it be unusual if you hadn...
...however, the bar--and the first-years who perennially frequent it on Thursday through Saturday nights--may be crashing back to earth. Two weeks ago, ABCC investigators who found six minors drinking at the Grille in a December sting recommended that the Commission refuse McCarthy the option of paying a fine in lieu of a license suspension, as he has done after each finding of underage drinking--at least five to the state and one to the city, according to the commissions' records...
...Clinton library had anything to do with her lobbying for the Rich pardon. Those arguing on Marc Rich's behalf knew well enough to work through Dozoretz rather than the Justice Department. As Rich attorney Jack Quinn said to the committee this week, "She was in much more frequent communication with the President than...
...attention on the scourge of AIDS in Africa. There is urgent need for all mankind to sit up and take notice of the epidemic, not only for charitable and humanitarian reasons but also practical ones. Given the fact that contacts among people of different countries and continents are frequent and close, the plague is bound to spread all over the globe unless action is taken to contain and eradicate it. While the onus lies on the governments of the countries concerned to educate the masses and create awareness about how to prevent TIME, the West can chip in with...
Next to the 1000-page IPCC assessment, the last few weeks were also filled with media reports of anecdotal evidence--extreme weather events that are projected to become more frequent as overall temperatures rise. Most notably, Mt. Kilimanjaro's ice cap, which has towered for millennia over Kenya and Tanzania's plains, is now melting and is expected to disappear within 15 years. Kilimanjaro is not alone in losing its snows--glaciers from the Alps to the Andes will disappear at a frightening rate--but the Kilimanjaro ice cap has been a valuable source of water for the surrounding areas...