Word: starke
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Gregory N. Price ’06-’07 is a mathematics concentrator in Mather House. Elizabeth M. Stark is a third-year at Harvard Law School. The authors are the founding members of Harvard College Free Culture...
...revoir - and good riddance - to the fondness for fringe-party voting that has recently plagued French politics. That was the central message of the first round of the nation's presidential elections. In a stark contrast to 2002, when 4.8 million people voted for Jean-Marie Le Pen of the far-right National Front and another 11.5 million for a gallimaufry of no-hopers, an unprecedented 37 million voters turned out on April 22 to propel Nicolas Sarkozy of the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) and Socialist Ségolène Royal into a May 6 runoff between...
...face of it, there's still a stark difference in financial power the lower down the Premier League table you go. According to Deloitte's 2006 Annual Review of Football Finance, the top five earners in the 2004-05 season - Manchester United, Chelsea, Liverpool, Arsenal and Newcastle United - accounted for almost half of both revenue and salary costs. And though average club revenue hit $124 million in 2004-05, the ratio of revenue at the richest club to that of the poorest is 4.7:1, well over twice the NFL's rate and almost double the NBA's. While income...
...extremes and we wanted to look at both. Camero: We merged the two main ideas, and as the show progresses, the girls are literally taking off their sequined, red chokers and their garters, and just throwing them on the ground. By the end, they’re just in stark black and white. With their previous experience—Quinn performed and staffed plays throughout high school, and Camero brings a strong musical background—the two have been able to play to their own strengths and to those of the cast. Quinn: I’ve performed...
...that chaos before. Malcolm Gladwell did it for snap decision making. Jared Diamond did it for the rise of civilizations. Now Lynne O'Donnell, with High Tea in Mosul, does it for sniper fire and kidnapping threats. Four years into the war in Iraq, she captures with stark simplicity what it's like to live with ceaseless fear and violence...