Word: facebooked
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...help make sodas cheaper. “Subsidies for corn make high-fructose corn syrup, an already cheap product and the main ingredient in soda, even cheaper,” says David S. Ludwig, associate professor of pediatrics at HMS. Students who listed soda as an interest in their facebook profiles said that they would be disappointed if the price of soda rose. “I would be significantly poorer,” said Christina L. Adams ’06. “It’s quite possible my tution money would double.” However...
Bottom Line: “Winter Passing” is only a decently enjoyable choice if your facebook profile features eulogies to “Elizabethtown” and the lyrics to “Such Great Heights...
Students may have woken up last Monday morning to pending facebook.com requests from that cheerful face from last year’s freshman musical—their high school’s freshman musical, that is. Facebook.com removed the separation between high school and college facebook accounts Monday, allowing students in both groups to send each other friend requests and subsequently view each other’s profiles. The integration of the two accounts raised concerns about privacy from students who prefer to share their college lives with their college friends. The issue of high schoolers viewing their collegiate counterparts?...
...revolutionary in his own right,” Mowery said. “He wanted to revolutionize the way campus operates and the way a Harvard education operates.” Some students have expressed disapproval of the shirts. Amanda L. Shapiro ’08 created a facebook group, “The Che-Summers Shirt Is a Desecration of Latin Revolutionaries and Humanity in General,” after the shirts were first produced last spring. “I was particularly offended by the shirts because I think that Che Guevara is an icon for rising from...
There’s got to be something about the Facebook and Cambridge. The site was birthed here in our so-named river town, and now, as further proof of this rather unscientific correlation, students at Cambridge University in England have given Facebook an anthem. The appropriately-titled “The Facebook Song,” written by two undergraduate music students—Tommy Hewitt Jones and Pete Foggitt—has taken the online community by storm, leaving in its wake polemical new groups on facebook.com, a renaissance for the synthesized orchestra hit, and increasingly vocal recognition...