Word: admitedly
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...they provide Harvard students “with a great show at a great rate.” Whether or not you care to go see “whoever most people will get psyched for,” as Siegfried described the quintessential HCC act, even skeptics must admit that Bob Dylan tickets were only $25, not $50 as they would have been elsewhere. The Commission’s heart may be in the right place, but according to Riesman what Harvard really lacks is “a place to see bands like Wolf Parade...
...difficulty of expressing in quantifiable terms as mutable an idea as “economic diversity.” While I admire and support Harvard’s current push to encourage more lower-income students to apply—and certainly hope that the university sees fit to admit fewer of the super-rich—a little recognition from the administration for families such as those I have described would be appreciated. No one needs to be reminded that there are students here whose personal allowances could easily cover their tuition, but my parents and the parents...
...admit, after recovering from my belief that my Harvard-addled mind had finally cracked, I was impressed. To paraphrase Ron Burgundy, “You created a talking ad with light up-headlights? How’d you do that? Actually I’m not even mad. That’s amazing.” But the inherent creepiness was a little too “Minority Report” for me. First, the ad is talking to me, then it is stalking me, then the robots take over the world...
...other night, I was taken aback when a guy who I had never met before pointed at me and said, “You’re philosophy, right? Yeah, um, I kind of facebooked you.” Although impressed that he actually had the guts to admit this, I was also slightly petrified. The ironic thing is that after he told me that he had facebooked everyone in his philosophy class, I found this less creepy and was completely understanding. Why? Because I have also gone through lists of names and facebooked unknown individuals—and don?...
...only one who has been on the UC since his freshman year. As it stands, he’ll likely be joining four others in the race for the UC’s top two postions—even if none of them will admit it.THE LIKELY FIVEUntil this year, a young sophomore intent on ruling the UC would have done well to land at the head of the Student Affairs Committee (SAC) first. Four of the last five UC presidents have used the position as a launch pad to the top, serving a full year as SAC chair before...