Word: tuesday
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Alexandra A. Petri ‘10 is a joint concentrator in english and classics in Eliot House. She hopes that her alternate Tuesday column, “Petri Dishes,” will continue to resemble a real petri dish by allowing her to turn a distinctive lens onto university cultures. Also by containing a strange green fungal growth in one corner...
...young adults. Sunday, Oct. 5. 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Sowa Open Market, 540 Harrison Ave., Boston. Free. 5) Cookie Monster Bring your sweet tooth to the 75 Chestnut Restaurant, but leave your purse at home, because you can sample and review expertly prepared cookies for free. Tuesday, Oct. 7 at 5:00 p.m. 75 Chestnut, 75 Chestnut St., Beacon Hill, Boston. Free...
After having two of its last three games postponed due to rain, and losing the third in overtime, the Harvard men’s soccer team sought its first win away from Ohiri Field in over three weeks Tuesday night against Boston University. However, finding itself a goal down after less than five minutes of play was not the start the team had envisioned. This beginning was just the first of the many disasters that the Crimson would have to weather throughout the night. Harvard’s long anticipated second road triumph once again eluded the Crimson...
...find that about 15 percent of jobs on Wall Street are part of the bubble and won’t be replaced even when the finance industry regains its longterm health. And that too may not be for sometime. As Rogoff said in an interview with The Crimson on Tuesday, “we might be back at full steam in 2010, but full steam will probably be slower than it used to be, because our financial system is decimated...
...added impetus thanks to Georgia's recent gas shortages. Representative Hank Johnson, a Democrat, says locals have been waiting in long lines for gas and paying big prices to fill up, which could be "partially responsible for people's desire not to bail out Wall Street." An editorial in Tuesday's Marietta Daily Journal gave a thumbs-up to the thumbs-down on the bailout, calling it the "right move from a long-term perspective, but what it means for the shaky economy in the short term is anybody's guess...