Word: cataloger
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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With those two books out of the picture, the next step is easy. Disregard the "workload" or "difficulty" of a class. Use the course catalog to narrow classes into two genera relative to you: interesting (very small) and uninteresting (very large). Next, take the first genus and divide it into two species: difficult and easy. Now, start making calculated decisions about how much you want to read and write this semester. The worst mistake you can make during shopping period is to enroll in an uninteresting class because you've read or heard that...
...post-internship blues were setting in when we let our fingers do the schlepping through the 1997-98 Course Catalog. Initially charmed by overused quotation marks and the inscrutable difference between a conference course and a proseminar, we soon despaired after sitting through page upon page of dreary course titles. But here and there are a few humdingers-courses whose names and blurbs make the heart race and palms sweat...
...crucial component of the first-year seminar application is an interview, which is often given to groups of two or three. I had expected 20 minutes of torment and stress underneath intense scrutiny from professors whose academic repertoire and expertise would read like the hefty course catalog in my backpack. I would be yet another illiterate ingrate in their retinue. But professors here did not prove as frightening as I had imagined they would...
...course catalog lists 70 first-year seminars for 1997-1998. With an approximate enrollment of 12 per seminar, this means that the Freshman Dean's Office (FDO) can only accommodate about 25 percent of the Class of 2001. Despite the work done by the FDO to maintain this program, it still cannot serve all first-years. The College should work to facilitate the FDO's work by funding increased numbers of first-year seminars...
After spending almost three years and more than $9 million, Donald Smaltz became the first among the independent counsels examining the behavior of the Clinton Administration to bring charges against his main quarry. Smaltz threw a whole catalog at Espy, producing multiple charges out of a small set of incidents. The 39 criminal counts accuse Espy of accepting gifts and favors from government-regulated businesses and then trying to cover...