Word: year-long
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
David B. Schneider ’10RR: Have you ever had a hot TF?DBS: Yeah. I had a Russian TF, late 20s—Slavic A, “Intro to Russian.” Hot. She’s hot. It was a year-long class so I spent a full year with her. We’re friends on Facebook.RR: Who friended whom?DBS: I friended her. RR: That’s a little creepy. What happened?DBS: Her picture is her sprawled on a bed. [Takes RR’s laptop and looks her up. Picture...
...Harvard Law Review’s 122nd president stepped into office this week, beginning a year-long term at one of the world’s most prestigious legal periodicals. Robert W. Allen, currently in his second year at Harvard Law School, was elected president Saturday. “It was an amazing feeling, sort of unreal at the time. I really didn’t expect the results and was really surprised when I found out,” said Allen, who won last year’s Sears Prize for having the highest grades in his class. After...
...department has also recently made changes in its curriculum as well: for the first time this year, students only have to take a one-semester sophomore tutorial, instead of a year-long class. They can choose either a course on American government or one on comparative politics and international relations...
...between the police and gunmen of the cartels is a sign that Mexico's long-running drug violence has entered a new phase. Until recently, most fighting had involved rival traffickers battling over turf, but today most of the violence is between the federal government and the gangsters. The year-long government crackdown has seriously rattled the cartels, the officials say, and they are making an orchestrated attempt to get the government to back...
...recession isn't far away. "The debate is not whether we're going to have a soft landing or a hard landing in the U.S. but how hard the landing is going to be," says Nouriel Roubini, professor of economics at New York University. He sees a sharp, possibly year-long U.S. recession and a global slowdown. Despite Asia's torrid growth, consumers in China and India accounted for only $1.6 billion of the world's spending last year, a tiny fraction of the $9.5 trillion spent by Americans, according to Stephen Roach, head of Morgan Stanley's business...