Word: annenbergs
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...only do these plans offer more options, they make a specific effort to cater to students’ notoriously hectic schedules. Unlike Annenberg, which has a rigid schedule that causes first-years to adopt geriatric eating habits and dine at 5 p.m., institutions such as Princeton serve dinner until 10 p.m. (though limited after 9 p.m.)—every college student’s dream. And in that awkward afternoon window where you’re always wishing you could grab a snack? You should be wishing you were at Yale, where some dining halls stay open continuously from...
...Brain Break. Unlike what HUDS promises, I have personally never seen Brain Break feature Eggo waffles or cereal, two frequently hyped items on the menu. So how do first-year students try to stave off those midnight hunger pangs? More often than not, they resort to smuggling food from Annenberg during the too-early dinner hours. Clearly, this is not the solution HUDS is looking for, but it’s one that students are forced to adopt by the schedule imposed on them...
...seems to appear. We pay for unlimited meals, and yet they’re seemingly limited—both by the dining halls’ hours and strict rules regarding which food we’ve technically paid for. Would it seem more legal to HUDS if I left Annenberg after a meal, came back and swiped again and then carried out my paltry orange or paper cup of cereal? Then, at least, I would be going through the motions of signing out the food that I’d already paid for on the meal plan. It seems...
...classes I help pay for, study books I bought and eat meals my own money goes toward. But like many of my fellow classmates, it’s a rare semester when I don’t sleep through a class or two or skip a few meals in Annenberg. I think I can count the amount of times I’ve eaten breakfast in the dining hall on one hand. Roughly speaking, that’s about 100 breakfasts I’ve paid for and not eaten each semester. Not only do I feel that this justifies...
...large grocery, people are able to get as much food as they want, based on the amount of money they’re willing to spend. The author of the recently-circulated statement is right: Annenberg is not Stop and Shop. But perhaps a serious effort should be made to make the two a little more alike...