Word: curriered
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...student body. And once that day finally comes, when the little white envelope is delivered to your door, there’s an overwhelming sense that the results it contains don’t really amount to anything. Sure you’ve been placed into Adams or Currier or Mather, but what does that even mean? Thanks to randomization, the Houses have been stripped of any sort of personality, and with that, any true sense of community or House pride. After all, there isn’t much substance to a “community” of people...
...Currier House caper has its residents tickled by the second disappearance of their Sesame Street mascot. “Elmo is gone again,” Patricia G. Pepper, assistant to the master, announced in an e-mail to a House list Friday. “Elmo” refers to a painting of the red-furred Sesame Street character that normally hangs on the lower main level of the House. Even its name has furred eyebrows. “I don’t like that people refer to it as the ‘Elmo painting...
...Undergraduate Council passed an initiative to allow a blocking group of up to eight people to link with another group. The two blocking groups would be assigned to nearby Houses. Under this new system, the Houses are divided into four “neighborhoods.” Cabot, Currier, and Pforzheimer make up one neighborhood; Adams, Lowell, and Quincy comprise another; Dunster, Mather, and Leverett create the third; and Eliot, Kirkland, and Winthrop round out the last neighborhood.“I think it’s caused a lot of restructuring of groups last minute,” Frank...
...rank of sergeant. Upon returning home, Cooper enrolled at Manatee Community College. “I needed to re-learn how to learn,” says Cooper.Cooper’s hard work paid off when he transferred to Harvard. These days, Cooper prefers the comforts of Currier House, “even though the amount of schoolwork can be overwhelming.” Still, he says that he’s “just happy to be here.”Wheeler, on the other hand, is happy to finally be getting his hands dirty...
...preceded by a banquet at which musical groups are expected to perform “Smash Brothers”-themed pieces. A VIRTUAL ICEBREAKERLarge-scale gaming isn’t limited to freshmen, either. Last Thursday, another classic Nintendo game was at the center of a Harvard social event. Currier House’s “Mario Kart” study break featured pizza, drinks, and a whole lot of virtual kart-racing action on a 20-foot projection TV. What’s curious about these events isn’t so much their existence as their focus...