Word: goldings
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Dartboard can understand the hardship of mass-producing food for a fickle population, and in many cases would not demand further expense. But for the Harvard students who want to salvage that not-so-happy meal or wake up to the familiar pots of gold swimming in his or her Lucky Charms, a change should be made...
...their strengths and their weaknesses, just like any other college does. Budding actors go to Yale, budding mathematicians to Harvard. You probably won’t see a future first-round NBA draft pick playing for the Crimson, but you might see a future women’s hockey gold medalist. Harvard may not be as exceptional a place as it’s made out to be. Nevertheless, debunking Harvard to your friends is different from debunking Harvard to the world...
...reinvigorating the French luxury-goods market when it was introduced in Paris in 1925 at the Exposition Internationale des Arts Decoratifs et Industriels Moderne. Now luxury purveyors are looking back to the jazz age for inspiration. Bottega Veneta designer Thomas Maier has paid homage to the gold-leaf look with his fall collection of shoes, below. And at Fendi, Deco shapes are reproduced in the Vanity handbag, above. Next month, Cartier will bring "Cartier Design Viewed by Ettore Sottsass"--an exhibit of mostly Art Deco jewelry--to Houston's Museum of Fine Arts...
Good advice? Yes and no. An angiogram is the gold standard of heart tests, and in Clinton's case it picked up a problem that all his previous stress tests and electrocardiograms had missed. But an angiogram is not something to be taken lightly. It involves injecting a dye directly into the blood vessels of your heart through a catheter that has been threaded into your chest from an artery in your groin. By taking X-ray images of the dye, doctors can get a pretty clear picture of where blood is flowing freely and where there are constrictions...
...Texas.) Those votes could be allocated according to population and political and economic influence. By my reckoning, Europe should get around 18 votes, Japan 7, and China 6, with an extra vote added every time China sees its economy grow by 10% or its athletes win an additional 10 gold medals at the Olympics. I tried out my idea on my father-in-law, a Nebraskan so conservative that he thinks driving on the left side of the road is subversive. Sure, he said, non-Americans could vote, "as long as you pay the same taxes...