Word: weeknightly
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...Luis S. Hernandez Jr. contributed to the reporting of this article. Small Change? Joshua H. Simon Crimson Staff College's charge their students far more for domestic long distance than any of the big-three residential carriers. College Carriers 20 Minute Domestic Weeknight Call 35 Minute Domestic Call Noon on Sunday Harvard $2.60 $4.20 Yale $2.60 $4.55 Stanford $2.00 $3.15 Cornell $4.76 $3.43 Princeton, U.Penn, Brown $2.00 $3.50 Residential Carriers 20 Minute Domestic Weeknight Call 35 Minute Domestic Call Noon on Sunday AT&T One Rate Online $1.80 $3.15 AT&T Connect 'N Save* $1.70 $3.15 Sprint Sense...
...touching down even as we speak." As a result, Jesus' set has been pushed back from 11:30 to 'round midnight. The club is half empty. Only the true believers, only the people whose jazz souls need saving, are going to stick it out that late on a weeknight...
...most to blame for pushing alcohol on their fellow students, underage or not. Put aside the extreme cases of hazing, which we all know take place here at Harvard and should be more of a concern. It is our social scene itself that every weekend, and on many a weeknight, too, damages the psyche of the non-drinker. I guarantee you that every time you plan a party around scorpion bowls or keg stands, someone feels pressured to drink. I have been that person. I guarantee you that every time you go around the room and have each person name...
Some people have managed to conjure up a balance between work and fun--or, worse, to make fun a priority. These are the people who hang out at bars or clubs on weeknight, play pool incessantly in the House basement, listen to pop music and watch reruns on TV. Yet while such choices are ours to make, these people are publicly derided and we all know it. Last semester, in the same space where the "Eight Days a Week" article appeared, The Crimson ran an article on "slackers" at Harvard (News, Oct.24). Despite a remarkably similar subject--surveying unusual students...
Twinkle, twinkle. The tiny white lights glitter in the ficus trees by the pool at Skybar in the Mondrian Hotel, Los Angeles' latest shrine to the good life. At 10 o'clock on a weeknight, poolside is alive with people drinking and smoking and looking superb. Some are rich, but many more are having fun pretending. Five years after rioting tore this city apart, they are lounging on huge, posh communal beds, sipping their drinks, floating in the bubble of this long good run and wondering, some of them, when it will burst. They thought the crunch was coming when...