Word: consciously
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...sleep (or at least talk any idiot through the process from his bed in Dunster) and he’s become an expert in installing memory, upgrading software and annoying everyone in the newsroom by paging the entire building to bitch about late writers and finicky technology. In a conscious effort to coordinate content in all sections, Gellis has stepped in to proof the magazine on a number of occasions. Even when he isn’t critiquing every page and missing grammatical errors, Gellis has been there for the mag. Behind the scenes, late at night, early...
...popular shortcut to Dunster and Mather Houses. While students might like to believe that the campus is a completely safe environment, the incidents of this past year clearly indicate otherwise. Students need to be aware of these crimes immediately so that they may exercise discretion and be more conscious of their surroundings when walking around Cambridge at night. By not fully and immediately addressing these safety realities, the administration is making life on campus all the more unsafe...
Let’s Go travel guides are for the rugged adventurer or the budget-conscious hostel-hopper who savvily wants to make his way through a city’s hidden secrets. The Four Seasons is not on the itinerary. But for one former Paris research-writer, doing it on a shoestring was not the order of the day when he asked his lady love to be his wife...
Like a first date who talks too much, Salts is overly self-conscious. Take the cartoonish lettering on the shingles above its door. Or the italicized mantra that takes up a full page of the menu: Throughout history, the offer of salt has been regarded as the offer of hospitality. The tables have saltcellars with cute little wooden spoons, which are remarkably impractical when it comes to actually seasoning food. Sprinkling salt from a spoon means spilling it all over, or having your meal end up tasting overwhelmingly of brine...
...that much. I mean, it shaped my economic world view. I was like the only 14 year old using the term moral hazard and things like that. On UC, I’ve been very conscious about making sound fiscal decisions where we price the services that we give at what they’re actually costing us. I like to say that the students pay for it either way, it’s just a question of whether they pay for it through their term bill or they pay for it through the fee for the service...