Word: everly
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Dates: during 2000-2000
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...Ever go to the Harvard Career Fair?" Pierson writes. "The ratio of corporations to non-profits must be near 10 to 1. It's sad. When did we get to the point where Harvard recruiting became equated with investment banking and consulting interviews? ... There's no network in place for teaching...
Nevertheless, it's not as pensive as the typical Frenchy love movie. (By this I mean the only Frenchy love movie I've ever seen, about a woman who jumps into the river after going to buy yogurt.) Anna Karenina contains real observations about what people can do to one another. I don't think the same can be said for Venus Beauty. We never quite know why most of it's characters do things, but at least they aren't stereotypes, and at least they're enjoyable to watch...
...bartender who mediates some of the main interactions (Shawn Snyder '03) has a caricatured role to play if ever one was written. Yet Snyder does it well-he stays out of the scene when he is not called for, and he somehow turns the rambling unintelligent speeches he is given into a character with a soul. If only Snyder as Irish bartender was differentiated from Snyder as Sicilian hairdresser by something more than...
...pivotal Ivy League bout remained up in the air until Rose keyed another thrilling fourth-quarter offensive performance. A false start penalty led to a dangerous fourth-and-6 situation for the Crimson, but the ever-poised Rose was able to see past the ensuing Tiger blitz. Just before being leveled by Princeton linebackers, Rose knifed a pass to senior tight end Chris Stakich at the 25-yard line. Stakich turned and, shielded by solid Crimson blocking, turned the short gain into a score. Harvard would later tack on another touchdown, sophomore tailback Matt Leiszler's third...
...country of 78 million people with an 88 percent literacy rate remains an alluring investment opportunity for U.S. business, even if the pace of reforming its archaic communist economy has been slow. Vietnam's communist leaders want U.S. investment more than ever, now that the early promise of turning the country into a new "Asian Tiger" economy has faded somewhat in a mire of bureaucratic red tape. Foreign investment, which amounted to more than $8 billion a year, or one third of the country's GNP, in the mid-'90s, has slowed recently, and a trade agreement signed with...