Word: choses
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...money for the endowed award pays for the dinner that all nominees and student nominators are invited to attend, according to Soren R. Rosier ’10, the chair of the awards committee. SAC received about 300 nominations for the award, and about 200 teachers and undergraduates chose to come to the event, according to Rosier. The students who nominated Smail noted that he had created an informal “Harvard Medievalist Club” that meets for monthly dinners at Grendel’s Den, the Harvard Square basement pub, according to Greenfield. One student who nominated...
...against the AKP "almost inevitable," according to a senior Western diplomat. In an interview with TIME, retired army general Riza Kucukoglu said the military is now prepared to step back "because democracy is working," but he insisted that the ruling party was to blame for the crisis because it chose to nominate a "religious President." If the army fails to "deal with extremist ideology," he added, "Turkey could become a swamp that threatens not only the region but Europe and the U.S. as well...
...pressing for action on this, Blair would be pressing George Bush on it." To those who knew him, there was simply never any doubt that he would be with the U.S. as it responded to the attacks or that he would stay with the Bush Administration if it chose to tackle the possibility that Iraq...
...really into it,” Salazar says. “I built a black room in my basement. I was really interested in the formal aspects of it.”Salazar thought her involvement in photography and the arts was over when she chose to go to Harvard instead of art school. But, as it turned out, her artistic life was just about to take off. Salazar decided that she wanted to explore new modes of expression.“By the time I got to college I didn’t know what I wanted photography...
...read ancient Buddhist texts in its original Sanskrit. At Harvard, she learned Tibetan instead and now works in India translating Tibetan to English. In Chicago, Sara M. Berliner ’98 began her college career at Harvard like the majority of her classmates. As a freshman, she chose what she called one of the more “classically Harvard concentrations”—history and literature—but found herself drawn more toward her electives. Now, nearly nine years later, Berliner says that she could not have predicted that concentrating in folklore and mythology with...