Word: catalogers
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According to the University's general catalog, the program was designed "to assure that [students'] total program at Harvard includes not only depth in one field but also knowledge of the modes of thought in others...
...this new version of Company, as Robert wanders among his married friends examining one marriage after another, is the tender moments. Veanne Cox is delightful as a bride balking at the church door. With wildly wobbling knees but a dizzyingly sure tongue, she rattles off an ever accelerating catalog of reasons why she shouldn't walk down the aisle. And Robert Westenberg, contemplating Robert's inquiry, "You ever sorry you got married?" offers a splendid version of that bittersweet hymn to ambivalence Sorry--Grateful. Westenberg vindicates the suspicion of those who (overlooking the cheesy arrangement of the original-cast recording...
...tutor's signature which is required for the class. When I called the office of the Registrar, they informed me that I had failed to fill in the bubble for one of the slots for the class and that the computer would not read the abbreviated course name, catalog number or signature I had listed...
...Students are led to believe that listing the course name in the box labelled "Abbreviated Course Name" will protect them from errors in filling in bubbles. In fact, the study cards ask that students "clearly print the relevant course name and catalog number before coding the bubble areas." I met both of those requests. In reality, all that matters is proper bubbling. The course name and catalog number are never checked or even looked at. This is misleading...
...chinned, sharp-eyed and relaxed in his morning panoply of damask dressing gown, unbuttoned waistcoat (showing the careless ease of the gentleman) and velvet turban. His ships ply the sea behind him, and his arm rests on an account ledger. As art historian Paul Staiti observes in an excellent catalog essay, Copley's clients liked his style because it was so embedded in the world of substance and inventories that had made them what they were...