Word: nighting
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Dorm: Holworthy Hometown: Los Angeles, CA Relationship status: Single Three words that describe you: sleep-deprived (approx 4-6 hours a night), tall (5'10'), OCD ( I have to fold and organize all my underwear and I need to make my bed each morning no matter what) Hottest trait: Sometimes my eyes change color to match what I’m wearing Claim to Harvard fame: Mock Trial, Peer Health Exchange, KKG <3 Best part about becoming a sophomore: Living in Adams House with the best roomies ever Fastest way to your heart: Have manners, be a good dancer...
House: Quincy Concentration: Progressively more difficult throughout senior year Hometown: Milwaukee, WI Ideal Date: with Broadway. At the end it decides to put me in all its parts. What do you look for in a girl/guy: Being over 18. Where to find you on a Saturday night: Watching movies on the projector in our room, which was definitely not stolen from any Harvard theatrical organization Your best pick up line: “You’d be surprised, but I make an alarmingly attractive pregnant woman” Best or worst lie you’ve ever told...
...more elephants feed outside the protected area than in it. "Wildlife is just as good as any other gold," says Jackson Looseyia, 41, one of the first Masai to work as a guide in the reserve and co-owner of Rekero, the eight-tent camp where we stay the night...
Fortunately, in Rekero and other small, upscale lodges, the Masai are also increasingly seen as a valuable asset. That night at dinner, I sit next to Helen Cotter, an English tourist who has come to celebrate her 50th birthday. She had seen all the animals she had wanted, but it's her guide she raves about. The young Masai man explained his culture, including the wild plants his tribesmen use to clean their teeth. "They don't go out and buy Colgate, do they?" she tells me. Says Looseyia's partner Gerard Beaton: "The tourists all come for the animals...
...hate on France, you might check out the latest report from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. According to the Paris-based group, the French spend twice as much time enjoying meals each day than most Americans, and get nearly an hour's more sleep each night than most Japanese (who averaged just 7.8 hours of shut-eye). The study, which is based on government data and Gallup polls from 18 of the OECD's member countries, includes a broad spectrum of "social indicators" - from education spending and fertility rates to adult height and "life satisfaction" - to determine...