Word: pound
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...focused on ringing the largest bell, a 13-ton mammoth nicknamed “Mother Earth.” During yesterday’s practice, Ogryzkov noticed that student Molly J. Hester ’08 used earplugs to dampen the bellowing sounds from the 700-pound clapper of “Mother Earth.” Since Ogryzkov does not use earplugs, Hester said he was “a real bell ringer.” Responding with the help of a translator, Ogryzkov replied, “I might not only become a real bell ringer, but also...
...above the bar. “As you walk in, the gargoyle will be right there to greet you,” said Loker Commons Project Manager Zachary A. Corker ’04, who has previously served as campus fun czar. Also on display will be a 500-pound fragment of the Memorial Hall bell, cracked in the same fire, Corker said. Officially known as the Cambridge Queen’s Head, the pub has been in the works for more than two years. Its debut has been delayed twice over the past year due to construction hold...
...lost, and as lawyers, we can all begin working together.”KEEPING IDEALSIM ALIVEThree years ago, Bartholet set out to capture this idealism. With the help of HLS, Bartholet founded the CAP, the first multi-faceted program in the nation to train students in the field.Based in Pound Hall, CAP offers a policy workshop that brings leading child welfare advocates into the classroom, an academic course to educate students on the legal issues relating to children, and a clinical course where students gain first-hand experience in the field. Recently it hosted a film series on the lives...
...seem to realize that it is not in their interest to keep undermining and embarrassing those in the Bush Administration who want to find a negotiated solution," says Einhorn, now a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "In for a penny, in for a pound. The Administration has no choice at this stage but to be patient a few days longer and see if the North Koreans will comply...
...Little Lin's life plenty fortunate already. His construction job near the city of Fuzhou earns him $375 a month in peak season. With that salary, he can afford Levis and Internet sessions to learn about his future home. He prefers David Beckham to Wayne Rooney, and knows the pound-yuan exchange rate. Often, Little Lin talks with his friends in England through icq or text messages. "There is not so much distance between Fujian and England," he says...