Word: driving
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...student was walking on Memorial Drive near Plympton Street at approximately 9:45 p.m. when he was grabbed from behind by the attacker, according to a police community advisory released yesterday by the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD). The attacker, who wielded a knife, demanded money from the victim...
...Army War College, points out that soldiers see hospital accomodations as a big step up from the conditions they're forced to endure daily in barracks. "If you want clean bed sheets and unstopped toilets, lose a leg," he quotes one soldier. "Otherwise, suck it up and drive on, soldier." A general who had been in Walter Reed told Scales that "the barracks at Fort Stewart, at Fort Bragg, at Fort Drum and at Fort Polk are far, far worse than anything I saw at Building 18," where some Walter Reed outpatients lived amid squalor, rodents, mold and cockroaches...
...Time, says: "Congress has been studying this for 100 years and has yet to come up with reliable energy savings." Daylight saving does affect people's habits: studies from the the last DST extension in 1986 show that we shop, head outside, play sports, fire up the barbecue, and drive more often once daylight saving kicks in. (Conversely, Nielsen ratings for prime-time TV traditionally fall.) But many of these activities, especially increased leisure driving, offset any environmental gains from the energy savings. "Our demand for power, whether through electric lighting, computers or TV, isn't really elastic," says Downing...
...Duncan said. “I kept trying until I realized it was 4:58 p.m. Luckily one of my roommates had Gmail”—Google’s e-mail program—“so we put my paper on a flash drive, and she sent it through her account. Crisis averted.” Students in Computer Science 51, the second part of the department’s introductory courses, received a 24-hour extension on a project that had also been due at 5 p.m. Friday. “There were some...
...with 1:45 left. The Crimson answered by running an isolation play for the explosive Housman, who after a forgettable first half had been unstoppable during the second period. Alone with his defender on the left wing, Housman realized that guard Geoff Reeves was overplaying him to the right. Driving left, Housman finished high off the glass and drew the foul from Reeves, and promptly converted at the stripe to give Harvard back a two-point lead.“Normally teams put a big guy down low so I can’t drive,” Housman said...