Word: pureed
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Clearly, the administration should switch from the FLA to the WRC. Pure logic sides with the WRC, and it costs Harvard next to nothing to switch. But why hasn't Harvard done as many universities recently have and made the change? The WRC has set April 1 as its cut-off date for universities to particpate in the first round of agenda-setting and decision-making...
...athletes and non-athletes alike, engage in activities for the pure enjoyment of them, not because people are cheering in the background. Of all the sporting events that I have witnessed as a Harvard student, some of the most impassioned have been those of inter-mural sports. These athletes, and yes they are athletes despite their lack of a major H, battle it out for themselves and their team/housemates. An empty MAC or QRAC does not hinder their enthusiasm...
...reasonably inconspicuous," and an old friend recalls his amorous reputation: "Jack never even went steady until late in his senior year." Author and Crimson editor Cleveland Amory '39, described him as "a pleasant, interesting guy. But the legend that we considered him destined for the presidency is pure hogwash." As JFK discovered during the Cold War, and as his former classmates witnessed during his reign in the White House, never underestimate the potential of the red, or the crimson, tide. A 1961 article in The Washington Post reports, "Musing, no doubt, about [JFK's] singular lack of prophetic indications, today...
...that would address their "deeper yearning for love and hope." His announcement in front of his high school was magical, hitting all the right notes about small towns and sacrifice and responsibility. Here was the perfect antidote to Clinton fatigue and Mr. No Controlling Legal Authority. He was pure. He was authentic. And he led Al Gore by 17 points in some polls...
...common thread in these examples is a uniquely European approach to business. While the U.S. has embraced the pure marketplace with ideological fervor, Europeans continue to believe the state has a role to play in guiding markets. Exhibit A is the GSM (global system for mobile communications) standard introduced in the European Union in 1991. Thanks to GSM, a subscriber in Portugal can use her phone from Ireland to Hong Kong. The U.S., in contrast, still allows various incompatible standards to compete like trains running on tracks with different gauges. As a result, a New Yorker cannot use his cell...