Word: attending
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Outside of the classroom, there are measures the council can take to promote student-faculty interaction, such as sponsoring concentration dinners and creating programs that encourage faculty to attend student performances and athletic events. We've already had success with the student-faculty dining program that allows professors to swipe into the dining halls and eat with students. The program was created last spring with the support of Dean of Harvard College Harry R. Lewis '68. We should all commit to eating at least one meal with a professor over the course of this semester...
...since the early 1990s. He and his wife Hanna, 57, helped Julie, 31, buy a condo and Erin, 28, start a business in Santa Barbara. They have also been funding Kristina, 27, who tried a modeling and singing career in New York City and then returned to California to attend college. Bengtson expresses the same ambivalence so many parents in his situation do when he admits, "When they have a need that isn't permanent, it's fun to satisfy, though I don't like supporting my children now, when I should be putting money away for my retirement." Then...
After hours, the better-funded producers tap into the delights of Vegas by hosting ritzy parties for the would-be buyers. I attend one such bash, given by Pearson TV, at the MGM-Grand Hotel's reincarnation of Studio 54. The party is a scrum full of polyester-suited local TV buyers eyeing the go-go dancers and the stars of the Pearson shows. The entire party seems designed to be one of those occasional corrections of global history. This ersatz Studio 54 is filled with exactly the people who were always refused entry in the real Studio 54. John...
Bollinger received his bachelor's degree from the University of Oregon in 1968 and went on to attend Columbia Law School, where he received his J.D. in 1971 and served as an editor at the Columbia Law Review...
...that case, the loudest applause given by the crowd gathered at the Mall might not have been in response to a call for tax cuts, a policy hailed that morning in The New York Times by William F. Buckley Jr. as the most morally pressing matter Bush can attend to at the outset of his presidency. "He must avoid the endless argument about whom to benefit, whom to deprive," Buckley said, and instead end "the moral problem in the government's withdrawing from the taxpayers' pockets more than is required...