Word: 1982ã
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...novel he is working on now, Eugenides has used this same technique. The story takes place at a college in 1982??and Eugenides himself graduated from Brown University in 1983. But he also discussed the difficulty in treading the line between credibility from autobiographical aspects and the creativity and distance needed for a successful narrative...
...victory over Georgetown. Princeton fell to Colgate, 27-24. One of those undefeateds will fall next weekend; Brown travels to Princeton on Saturday for a 1 p.m. kick. Harvard, meanwhile, kept itself in the race. There has not been a two-loss Ivy champion since 1982??when Harvard, Penn, and Dartmouth all finished 5-2 in conference play—so a second league defeat would be difficult to overcome. The Crimson, however, didn’t foreground that concern in Saturday’s victory. “We didn’t even talk about...
Commencement dates can be a little confusing when it comes to Nicholas D. Kristof ’82. But this time around, Kristof—who enacted advanced standing to graduate from the College in 1981, a year before his peers, and only recently switched his class affiliation to 1982??will have to get his dates right. He is due to give the farewell address at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG) graduation exercises today at 2 p.m., and will be serving as the class marshal for his class’s 25th reunion ceremonies. Key KSG administrators...
...signaling of proposed and actual cuts in federal funding really hurt our ability to diversify the class as quickly as we would have liked,” Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid William R. Fitzsimmons ’67—who was serving as acting dean in 1982??says. “We were frankly quite concerned that this kind of signaling could discourage students from low- and moderate-income backgrounds from applying to colleges at all, especially private colleges and universities...
...April 1982??before Harvard learned which of the students accepted to the Class of 1986 would actually matriculate—Fitzsimmons told The Crimson that the 1982 yield could drop because of national economic pressures or rise because some competing colleges had not reaffirmed aid-blind admissions, as Harvard...