Word: grads
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...It’s signed by someone named Vodka. Krukowski, for one, takes his duel life—and the above comment—in stride. “I bet I know who that is,” he says, laughing. “I was in grad school at the time.” Rather than launch into a story of Vodka’s raucous college years, however, Krukowski’s conversation gravitates more toward Duchamp. “Duchamp was an artist in every sense,” he says. “He even...
...need a new leader, and we need one now. Larry’s not coming back. So how about a local boy, a Boston product, a Harvard grad who recently returned home to the mothership...
Alex Slack ’06 is a former editorial chair and history concentrator in a part of Leverett G-Tower overlooking the grad housing construction site. As soon as he gets a good night’s sleep, his column “Peripheral Vision” will cover local issues just beyond the purview of the average Harvard student. Look both ways, and find his column on alternate Mondays...
...Many journalists merely chalked the quote up to Guillen’s characteristic irreverence and self-confidence. One can also imagine that he was just kidding, or maybe using his playoff success to rail against the emerging Ivy League baseball intelligentsia (like Boston Red Sox general manager and Yale grad Theo Epstein, or recently deposed Dodgers GM Paul DePodesta ’95, or Oakland A’s assistant GM David Forst ’98, or Florida Marlins vice president and assistant GM Mike Hill ’93).But speaking as someone currently enrolled in his second...
...dead end but sort of 'O.K., here's your role, here's your lab, here's what you're going to be working on.' Even if it's a really cool product, you're locked into it." Like Gao, Pearce is leaning toward consulting. "If you're an M.I.T. grad and you're going to get paid $50,000 to work in a cubicle all day--as opposed to $60,000 in a team setting, plus a bonus, plus this, plus that--it seems like a no-brainer...