Word: crams
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...spots on Ohiri field, 60 spaces—those furthest from the entrance—were set aside for Yale. “When you cram people in, that’s when you get hotness,” said Jose Garza, a sophomore from Yale...
...group has had trouble finding a suitable space for the ceremony in the past. Last year the event was held in the Junior Common Room of Eliot House, an improvement over three years ago, when dozens of people tried to cram into a common room in Dunster. The room was so cramped that a student caught fire when her hair came in contact with a candle...
Barber says she concentrates in English because of her personal interests, although she came to college wanting to focus on business. She also says that because of practice times, she can’t keep up with the reading and has to cram before papers and exams...
...college career spent doing little away from the library or the laboratory is also something of a waste. In many ways, Harvard’s superior reputation comes not just from its academic prowess—students at MIT or the University of Chicago, for example, are forced to cram far harder than Harvard undergraduates—but for the way it has traditionally fostered excellence both inside and outside the classroom...
...partial to a drop of tea but fed up with the raucous atmosphere and chain-smoking laobaixing (the colloquial Chinese expression for the man in the street) that cram Shanghai's regular cafés, then check out the sedate and sequestered atmosphere of the Guyuan Antique Teahouse, tel: (86-21) 6445 4625. Inspired by Ming-dynasty architecture, the city's finest tea parlor is a classy joint where executives come to impress clients and contacts with China's most exclusive brews. Its imposing wooden gateway (200 years old and transported to Shanghai from culturally rich Shanxi province...