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Word: extracurriculars (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...form itself is quite simple—it asks students to list their academic and extracurricular interests, music tastes, and the number of roommates they prefer. It also requests that students list—on a scale from one to five—how neat and how quiet they want their rooms to be. The form also requires students to choose one of three options for the times they go to bed and wake up. On the back, the form asks students to write an essay describing themselves and what they want in a roommate...

Author: By Adam M. Guren, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Freshman Roommates, Meet Your Makers | 8/12/2005 | See Source »

After looking at students’ preferences for rooming-group size, ADF’s look for is compatibility. “We try to find people who have at least one thing in common with academic interests, extracurricular, personal descriptions,” Nye Barth said. She said she also takes into account things like “messiness and hours, though those change dramatically when [students] get here...

Author: By Adam M. Guren, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Freshman Roommates, Meet Your Makers | 8/12/2005 | See Source »

...tired with all the sports and extracurricular activities. Your hormones are just starting to kick in, and you yell at your parents, teachers and friends about things like homework, picking up your room or just frustration,, so they're thinking, "Who is this crazy person...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Marissa Anderson, Marengo, Iowa | 7/29/2005 | See Source »

Many, like Forbess, attend the Summer School so that they can devote the entirety of their days to one, sometimes two, difficult courses that, if taken during term-time, would eat away large chunks of their time, stunting their academic, extracurricular, and social lives (not to mention sleep schedules...

Author: By Brendan R. Linn, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Summer Programs Cull Busy Students | 7/15/2005 | See Source »

...waning spirit of community. Where that occurs, vandalism is rare. Nathan Goldman, chairman of the sociology department at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago, reports that a school deeply involved in its neighborhood-by holding night programs for parents, for instance, or by opening its doors to extracurricular community functions-invariably deters the vandal. Somehow, the behavioral scientists feel, man must discover how to apply this lesson on a broader scale. The vandal's deed is his declaration of defiance against a society that he neither understands nor approves. The solution to it does...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: The Vandal: Society's Outsider | 6/27/2005 | See Source »

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