Word: finished
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...tutor. While these people are usually easy-going and understanding, they generally are not appreciative of loud noise late at night. Tutors usually go to bed—get ready for this—before midnight. You’re probably asking, “How can these people finish their papers, play a few matches of Halo on Xbox, grab late night Felipe’s, and poke all of their crushes on Facebook before midnight? Well it turns out that tutors don’t lead similar lives to us college students, and that is exactly why they...
...urbanism, in the several senses of the verb.Adjaye, the Graduate School of Design’s Tange visiting professor in architecture, was born in 1966 in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania—just years after the country gained independence from the United Kingdom. Adjaye moved to London to finish his education and has become one of Britain’s leading architects. “African Cities” shows roughly 40 photographs each of 10 capital cities Adjaye snapped in his travels to the western, southern, and eastern regions of the continent. Many African capitals seem wracked with...
...Dean of the College Benedict H. Gross ’71 is considering forming a committee of faculty and administrators to review the procedures of the Ad Board next semester, after professors finish voting on the curricular review this spring...
...half, Dartmouth hit a 4-0 run that gave them a more-than-comfortable 18-5 lead. The game was not nearly over for Harvard, though, and hard-nosed defensive play paired with a newly sparked offense pushed the Crimson to a 5-2 scoring streak to finish the game. Martin and sophomore midfielder Sarah Bancroft each had two goals in the last 15 minutes to close out the strong half. “We started playing really, really well at the end of the game,” Martin said. “We just have to come...
...indicator, but an imperfect one. Adolescents and people in their early 20s are not famous for good judgment and sober reflection. Indeed, recent neurological studies reveal that the brain doesn't even finish laying down all its wiring until deep into the second decade of life - far beyond the babyhood years in which scientists once believed this basic work got done. "Adolescents tend to take more risks in general and tend to be more impulsive," says psychologist William Pollack, of McLean Hospital in Boston. "Boys [especially] are socialized into the idea that such behavior...