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Since Mom Corps opened shop in 2005, it has matched nearly 1,000 women with manager-level positions at small firms as well as Fortune 500 ones. Though the number of listings fell in recent months, founder Allison O'Kelly says, things are picking up as hiring freezes make project-based, benefits-free workers the only kind companies can afford...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hard Times Send 'Economoms' Back to the Job Market | 3/12/2009 | See Source »

Will Shortz is to puzzles what Oprah is to books - an endorsement by the New York Times crossword editor is as good as gold. He helped popularize Sudoku in the U.S. and has sold more than 5 million volumes of the number-sequencing game. Now he's moved on to another numerical brainteaser, KenKen, which boasts something Sudoku does not: actual math. The game was invented by a teacher in Tokyo to help kids learn arithmetic; kenken means "cleverness squared" in Japanese...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Is KenKen the Next Sudoku? | 3/12/2009 | See Source »

...reception has been good, though not Sudoku-mania good. (Then again, Sudoku wasn't an instant hit either; an Indiana architect devised the game in the 1970s, but it languished for decades under the unfortunate name Number Place.) Only five years old, KenKen already appears in the Times of London and Le Figaro in Paris, and it's coming soon to an iPhone near...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Is KenKen the Next Sudoku? | 3/12/2009 | See Source »

While Harvard’s incredibly diverse student body allows for a dizzying array of clubs and activities, it also paves the way for an unusually high number of awkward encounters. Here is FM’s list of the fifteen most uncomfortable and hilarious hypothetical mixers on campus...

Author: By Sanghyeon Park, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: 15 Mad Awkward Mixers | 3/12/2009 | See Source »

...biggest grievance, personally, is that no one considers the flip side. While I have occasionally heard a stray Princeton girl or guy complain about a perceived lack of handsome men, I think I can count the number of times on one hand — while I’d need all the hands of the students in my Developmental Psych lecture (hint: it’s held in Friend 101, and people sit on the floor) to tally up the opposite grievance. What makes the boys think they’re any better than we are?  Somehow...

Author: By Bonnie J. Kavoussi | Title: Around the Ivies | 3/12/2009 | See Source »

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