Word: educationã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Luring students with emblem-covered playing cards, glowing balls, mugs, and mouse pads, representatives pitched their companies to prospective interns at the Summer Opportunities Fair yesterday in the Graduate School of Education??s Gutman Library. Bain & Company tried to entice passing students with red plastic eggs full of silly putty, while Merrill Lynch handed out colorful dartboards. Microsoft staffers sported black t-shirts with the words “Let’s Get Nerdy” emblazoned on them. They distributed the shirts to everyone who visited their table. Students have attended this fair each year...
...will come to the voters asking for the nomination, but they who will come to her, imploring her to run.” Morris attacks Clinton’s record and its focus on “traditional women’s issues”—like education??seeking to reveal her incompetence and dishonest acceptance of credit for other’s efforts. Clinton’s “substantive” accomplishments, he suggest, come only with help from her husband—or from Morris himself. (Her recent politically-savvy move...
...Going back to the beginning of the Republic, and Jefferson’s view that virtue and talent were sown as liberally among the poor as the rich, the contribution of education??and especially higher education??to equality of opportunity has been a central concern,” Summers said...
...rubble of our lives, we find friends to merge into and build ourselves back up. To quote legendary Crimson columnist Martin S. Bell ’03 quoting legendary Harvard baseball coach Joe Walsh, “Some time when your schooling’s over, when your education??s over, you’ll look back and you’ll say, ‘Hey, I did this with these guys...
...their efforts to guide the ongoing Harvard College Curricular Review. While the review continues to face intense scrutiny and criticism from the Faculty, Summers stepped down from his leading role in the review in the spring of last year.One member of the review’s Committee on General Education??of which Kirby was chair, and Summers an ex officio member—said that the president was clearly frustrated with the dean’s practice of skimming over difficult issues rather than thoroughly addressing them. Kirby and Summers have “very different personalities...