Word: yogurts
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...race, Republican Senator Sam Brownback is lost and late, being driven around Iowa by a college intern in the Brownback family's Chrysler minivan. He is looking at a map, pumping his own gas, paying with his own credit card and then running into McDonald's. "$7.15? For a yogurt parfait and a small cheeseburger?" Brownback asks the cashier, who explains that the college kid got a Big Mac. "Oh," he says, and drags a $20 bill and a quarter from his pocket...
...musician of my age and level would have a manager, but I refused to have one,” he said; instead, he is working on his degree during the school year and performs mostly during the summer. Koh also has a passion for cooking that goes beyond yogurt, according to fellow Cabot resident Hyungjin B. Kang ’08. “He was able to conjure a traditional Korean dish, bibimbap, just with the daily offering from the dining hall,” he said. The cello and human rights stuff is great, Bong...
...again, but it would be funny if she was in Widener a lot, you know? 6. Your Harvard ID card. Where the hell is it?! 7. “That kid” from section. Because you hear him (or her) talk enough in class. 8. Newly purchased Berryline yogurt. Mug unsuspecting customers before they dig in. If you eat the evidence, is it still a crime? 9. Professor John Parker. Where did that guy go? And is he still single? 10. Free booze. Now a rarity on campus, you’ve got to know where...
...that brain break exists. They even wash and replace our mugs in most dining halls on a daily basis. Those who lambaste HUDS’ recent extravagance ought not forget the myriad other food luxuries we get that would be extraordinary to every other college student: special themed dinners, yogurt parfait and Asian noodle “action stations,” local and organic products, bagged meals, personal grill orders, and whole racks of herbs and spices—all provided at no additional cost to the Harvard undergraduate. “Our reason for being here...
...long run. "At the end of the day, the new Danone is one of the best things we can imagine for the future," says Riboud. Replacing the unopened package of cookies on the table, Sacchi mentions that in Europe, Danone has just launched something called Essensis, a yogurt that he claims is good for your skin. What's next--yogurt that makes your hair grow? "Nobody would have bet that a yogurt made to help you go to the toilet more often would be a success," he says with a shrug. Just try doing that with a cookie...