Word: norã
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...construction, described eating at the restaurant as a “transcendent experience.” He added that he was not concerned about the eatery’s light business during its opening day, attributing it to Saturday’s St. Patrick’s Day nor??easter. Bernstein said the restaurant will work to become a “partner in the neighborhood” by donating a portion of its earnings to the Cambridge Family and Children’s Service, a local non-profit which provides adoption, foster-care, and counseling services...
...Harvard women’s tennis team escaped the Nor??easter that pounded New England this weekend to the warm and sunny climes of south Florida only to suffer a similar battering at the hands of Miami and Florida International, falling by identical scores of 7-0. The Crimson was without senior Julia Forgie, who remained in Cambridge to finish her thesis, and sophomore Beier Ko, who was absent due to illness. Undermanned, Harvard forfeited both a doubles and a singles match, giving their opponents an advantage before a serve was even struck. With the losses, the Crimson...
...February 1978, one of the worst Nor??easters on record struck New England, paralyzing all of Boston under several feet of snow and shutting down Harvard. Then-president Derek C. Bok was asked why he didn’t close the University as soon as the storm hit. According to Plummer Professor of Christian Morals Rev. Peter J. Gomes, Bok replied, “I tried to, but I didn’t know...
...Nor??easter brought over six inches of snow to New England this past weekend, closing several east coast airports and causing over three hundred and thirty Massachusetts schools to cancel. Nevertheless, on Monday morning, Harvard students trekked through the snow to class. Blizzards may have granted Harvard students a chance to sled on dining hall trays or to construct giant snow phalluses, but hardly ever will a snowstorm relieve undergraduates from classes. The official FAS “inclement weather” policy states that since most of Harvard’s student body and faculty live...
Take the weeklong Nor??easter that hit our campus in October. As I’m sure we all noticed, the slant of the wind and rain made it impossible not to get soaked during the long walk from building to building. I see no reason why we had to spend two days sitting in lecture with our wet jeans plastered to our shivering thighs when we have $25.9 billion at our disposal to protect us from inconveniences like the weather. If the United States of America—which doesn’t even have an endowment?...