Word: helling
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...little saga might have gone the way of most of those little sagas. But then one day, as Smoking continued to languish in the ninth circle of Hollywood-development hell as Mel and his people occupied themselves with an obscure fracas set in Jerusalem 2,000 years ago, I received a call from a 24-year-old named Jason Reitman...
...group that is supporting the guards’ unionization efforts. At the event, Solano said: “[Allied says], ‘we’re not going to fire you for starting a union, but we’re going to make your lives a living hell.’” AlliedBarton has recently also been targeted by student labor activists at the University of Pennsylvania. William Murphy, Harvard director of employee and labor relations, said yesterday that Harvard has no part in the unionization negotiations with Allied. “We view...
...issue of the storied Harvard Advocate came out early last week, sporting a fresh, leafy cover and a hell of revealing table of contents. The masthead is conveniently printed on the opposite page, and if you check the names through with your index finger, all but half a dozen contributors are members of The Advocate’s editorial board. Call it incestuous or call it harmless, but if nothing else, it’s just undeniably kind of awkward when the face of J. Enzo A. Camacho ’07, a member of the Art board, appears...
...CAREERAs Delany prepares himself for government tutorials, W. Robert Wheeler ’05 settles into a daily routine slightly different than what he was used to as an undergrad. Last summer, Wheeler enlisted right after graduation, and entered basic training. “It was kind of like hell,” Wheeler says. “The drill sergeant is on you from the minute you wake up to the minute you go to sleep, and nothing you do is ever good enough.” On Dec. 8, 2005, Wheeler was officially made an officer after graduating...
...Even if a severe pandemic occurs, Sandman points out, most people would probably survive. "Let?s say it kills 5% of infected people, which is twice as bad as 1918," he says. "That still means that 95% of people who get the flu have two weeks of hell and then they get better. And when they get better, long before the government makes a vaccine, they?ll be immune." We should then figure out how to gather these immunized folks, Sandman says, into volunteer groups to do the jobs?like food and water deliveries - that might be needed...