Word: morgenstern
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...They don't want to play for [another] half an hour," council member Jared S. Morgenstern '03 told The Crimson as the crowd began to get restless...
...Morgenstern said this wasn't the first time the band acted weird. He said that they made strange and "random" demands of the council members in charge of hospitality--for instance, the band requested Quaker Oats, according to Morgenstern...
...liked the way it was because I had room to dance," Jared S. Morgenstern '03 said...
...Oscar nomination (Ordinary People) and tried some unsuccessful series (e.g., New York News) since signing off as The Mary Tyler Moore Show's Richards in 1977, Moore two years ago began shopping around the idea of reviving the working-woman icon and her eccentric best pal, Rhoda Morgenstern (Valerie Harper). Moore admits she once would have felt uncomfortable trying to re-create her 1970s success. "But then," Moore says, "I began to get more and more parts that fulfilled my need to do daring roles"--see her brilliant turn in 1996's Flirting with Disaster, in which she displayed...
Alas, unlike Francis Crick, I can't claim to have discovered the secret I'm touting. It was discovered half a century ago by the founders of game theory, John von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern. They made a distinction between zero-sum games and non-zero-sum games. In zero-sum games, the fortunes of the players are inversely related. In tennis, in chess, in boxing, one contestant's gain is the other's loss. In non-zero-sum games, one player's gain needn't be bad news for the other...