Word: freshmen
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...four noise violations and two incidents of underage drinking? 11) How’d you get into the University president’s office? Like, what were your SAT scores? GPA? Extracurriculars? 12) Does endowment matter? 13) How are you feeling about being under all of those freshmen next year? 14) Have there been any stained blue dress incidents in Mass Hall? 15) How many licks does it take to get to the Tootsie-Roll center of a Tootsie Pop? 16) Why do you hate transfer students? 17) If you could select one undergrad to give you a deep tissue...
...next month, as is every other department in FAS.” This sort of insecurity might trail after any period of flux, but it must be accompanied by a resolute show of good faith in the system to which we are transitioning. If current underclassmen and incoming freshmen are to be confronted with an unstable curricular landscape at large, then the College should at least maximize the number of departmental courses that count for Core credit. Students should not be impeded on the road to graduation by the insistence that every course accepted for Core credit meet bureaucratic...
...course, this latter need presupposes that the decision to force this choice on incoming freshmen will be preserved, in spite of its glaring problems. This decision does not encourage student freedom, but rather general ambiguity and confusion. Moreover, it will likely condemn one group or the other to a few semesters’ worth of inhospitable course choices from scant options and even worse advising—not the ideal way to kick off a new epoch of learning in Cambridge...
...similar in spirit, generally ranging from “get them drunk” to “get them laid.” This surprises no one: Harvardians are always eager to establish their partying bona fides, and ever-hopeful that next year’s crop of freshmen will be both hotter and less awkward than those that came before...
...incoming freshmen, who know relatively little about these changes, be expected to make informed decisions about competing curricula? Freshmen advisors complain of having been left in the dark, too, in spite of the fact that they will be expected to advise new students a mere four months from now. All of this, and administrators are hardly apologetic...