Word: bits
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...afraid of marching into OCS and seeking out the resources you need. Looking through the countless notebooks of offerings is an excellent way to begin the career-choosing process. It seems a bit simplistic to remind people of this, but I have talked to countless students who have walked into OCS, wandered around the first floor a bit aimlessly, felt silly, and left. Remember that the staff is there to help you, no matter where you are in your career exploration process...
...high school seniors apply for admission to Harvard, they may well find a third box next to the traditional options of male and female. Instead of being asked to define themselves within the normal binary, the high school seniors will be able to choose to define themselves as a bit of both. Of course, at that point, the issue may be moot: the students may choose none of the three, pushing aside the crimson application in favor of the simple male/female boxes in the blue and white application delivered from New Haven. Either way, I'd love to see their...
...Romans had a god of central banking, he might look like Hans Tietmeyer. Tall, square-jawed, with white hair that often looks a bit windblown, and above all stern, the president of Germany's fiercely independent Bundesbank always seems ready to hurl down a thunderbolt against any sign of inflation. In fact, his role is nearly that Olympian. Europe's most powerful central banker, Tietmeyer has far more influence than any other individual over the Continent's interest rates, exchange rates and the course of its struggling economic rebound. This year he will be a pivotal figure in determining...
...Underground] might generate a little bit of money, but I think it's combination of keeping alcohol on campus and providing entertainment," he says...
...first of the vignettes featured the two best performances in the play. "Sure Thing" tracks all the possible turns and twists a conversation between a man and a woman can take. Every time the two strangers, Bill (Scott Brown '98) and Betty (Jessica Jackson '98), complete an awkward bit of conversation, a bell rings. Instantly, they find themselves thrown back a moment in time--only to try the interaction again...