Word: livee
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...never get reviewed by him.5. FM: How do you both like working out of Harvard?JW: I think both of us feel all the intellectual benefits of academia and also the risks to the kinds of non-academic lives that we decided upon years ago. For me, this primarily involved the romance of trying to live by the pen, trying to make a salary from writing words. Obviously academics do that in a different way—but I never want to lose that primary business of essentially being a journalist, a word I’m happy and proud...
...renowned historian to envision an analogous situation facing her own department.“What I said was, imagine Robinson Hall getting an announcement that some hotshots from the Kennedy School are going to take over, because they’re in with Obama. The history department has to live in freshman dorms,” he said. “Okay, so they’ll still have a place to live, but it kind of sends a message,” Henle added.Several MCB department members in Fairchild said they were concerned by the administration?...
Best known for his roles in “Saturday Night Live,” “Driving Miss Daisy,” and “Ghostbusters,” Aykroyd is also the founder of the House of Blues, a music club chain...
...Harvard squads did not show significant progress this weekend in Sugarloaf, Maine, they did finish a season-high ninth place at the Eastern Intercollegiate Ski Association Championships. The improved performance left the squads in good spirits heading into next year.“While this season did not quite live up to my expectations, I have seen a remarkable amount of progress in my four years here,” said Nordic captain Dave McCahill, who was competing in his last event for the Crimson. “While we will never have the facilities of schools like Dartmouth...
Medical advances may also play into legal arguments. Wolpe says progress has allowed the terminally ill to live longer, but it has transformed dying from something that occurs relatively quickly and painlessly to something more drawn out and potentially agonizing. "So," he says, "some people have decided that if we are going to intervene in the natural act of dying and allow people to live even though disease is rampant in their body, we can't make someone's decision to die the one exception to our meddling." And if assisted suicide remains illegal, Satz says it could force more...