Word: pens
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
There exists just one viable refuge from the whole macabre orgy: the Farnsworth Room. Soft lighting and a standing ban on laptops make this genteel area a solemn sanctuary from the pandemonium outside. Rediscover your pen and move upstairs, and watch as all your despondency dissipates...
...first round of voting, the French chose mainstream candidates whose parties could actually enact legislation in the Assemblée nationale; fringe right and left candidates garnered especially low percentages—10 candidates managed merely a combined 24 percent. Tellingly, Jean-Marie Le Pen, the far-right candidate of the Front National who made it to the second round in 2002, received the smallest share of votes he has received in any presidential election since...
...that George W. Bush has used his vetopen for only the second time in his presidency, rejecting a $124 billion military-spending bill that would have set a timetable to bring U.S. combat troops home, there is one group that is suddenly getting some attention again in Washington: congressional Republicans. That's because Democrats lack the two-thirds vote they need to override Bush's veto and realize that their only real option for forcing any concessions from the White House is to rewrite the measure in a way that draws significant G.O.P. support, even if it means losing...
...fire to Mather House on a whim and pee it out. Everyone cheers and then we all go out for ice cream because I have coupons. First thing you notice about a guy/girl: Class, alignment, and guild affiliation. Your best pick-up line: “You dropped your pen. Yes, you did. Here it is.” Best or worst lie you’ve ever told: Last summer, I told my 8-9 yr old campers a 30-minute bedtime story about how I had had a brain aneurysm and now sometimes I see people without mouths...
...benefits of both the flexibility and the individual attention that students receive in those departments, Ryan says.Bryn M. Neuenschwander ’02 entered Harvard with an interest in anthropology and science fiction, left with a degree in anthropology and folklore and mythology, and now goes by the pen name Marie Brennan. Neuenschwander, author of two science fiction novels, says that a class she took with Foster sparked her writing career. “Out of her course I got $500 and a trip to Florida,” Neuenschwander says, referring to a prize she won for a story...