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Word: greekness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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ATHENS Chopard's Mille Miglia GMT ($4,380) was created for the auto race of the same name. Greek collectors eagerly await the updated version every year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The A List: Watches | 11/29/2005 | See Source »

...chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, I am deeply offended by Nicholas F.B. Smyth’s derogatory use of “fraternities and sororities” in his comment (“The Plympton Street,” Nov. 16). Smyth’s incorrect usage of the Greek terms stems from his illogical tautology that “excessive drinking and drunken behavior” define fraternal culture. Smyth’s association of rowdiness and drunkenness with the Greek system is completely ignorant. Across the nation, fraternity and sorority members collectively give hundreds of thousands of volunteer...

Author: By Jonathan M. Hyman | Title: ‘Frat Culture’ Label Unfairly Characterizes Greek Groups | 11/21/2005 | See Source »

While Final Clubs consist only of men, they are not fraternities in the Greek system...

Author: By Jonathan M. Hyman | Title: ‘Frat Culture’ Label Unfairly Characterizes Greek Groups | 11/21/2005 | See Source »

...zero, as the basis for developing such new disciplines as calculus and trigonometry. Of the early math books on view, the illustrated Treatise on Geometry is significant for its author, the Muslim king of Saragossa, Spain, and its date of 1080. Similarly, Arabs absorbed the theoretical concepts of Greek medicine, adding to them the idea of scientifically monitoring patients in a special place - a hospital. One page in a Treatise on Anatomy, written in Persia in 1411, details digestive organs, veins and arteries outlined on a human body. And a 1632 copy of Avicenna's Canon of Medicine delineates...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ahead Of Their Time | 11/13/2005 | See Source »

...community in central Texas, only incredible strokes of luck could have placed me in either of them.I was first introduced to the final clubs by the Unofficial Guide to Life at Harvard, which featured nothing more than a list of the eight organizations. Noting the apparent absence of a Greek system at Harvard, my father–who attended University of Texas at Austin–said, “Hey, Rex. These look like a pretty good deal. You should consider joining.” It seemed like reasonable advice. After all, my dad had been an Alpha...

Author: By Rex G. Baker, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: A Tale of Two Houses | 11/9/2005 | See Source »

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