Word: commonnesses
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Event organizer Ryan L. Newbrough ’09 was enthusiastic about the dinner discussion, which was held in Winthrop House’s Owen Common Room...
...think it’s real all the way through. Dreams are real and reality is real. The common antonym and the common distinction between dreams and reality is a mistake...
...Absolutely. I ask people form all different walks of life to share their dreams. We find out that we’re much more alike than different. Dreams truly are common human experiences in a very deep way. Often dreams take us to certain scenarios, and if we don’t get idea of what were supposed to do or how we’re supposed to change, the dreams keep reappearing...
...Harvard. Though Harvard might claim to contradict the study’s trend, John W. Curtis, one of the report’s authors, said that universities like Harvard have a lot of teaching done by graduate students. “It’s becoming much more common for graduate students to become the sole instructor and the more of a shift in that direction, the more that grad students are being treated as part-time faculty,” said Curtis, who is the AAUP’s director of research and public policy. While this pattern...
...common economy, territory, culture and language are typical features of a nation, it's easy to see where Belgium falls short. For more than a century after the country's birth in 1830, French-speaking Wallonia - the southern part of the country with roughly a third of the population - was in an industrial whirl, thanks to its success in mining and steelmaking. Flanders was considered a backwater; it wasn't until 1930 that Flemish students could study in their own language at a Belgian university. Now, with the decline of heavy industry, Wallonia is in a slump while Flanders...