Word: hattier
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Tulane students, time spent at Harvard was marked by a sense of impermanence and unfamiliarity.“The biggest thing that’s plagued us all—well, for me—is a sense of uncertainty,” says Sarah M. Hattier, a visiting sophomore. “This is a semester of my college life…I only have eight and I want to make the most of this one, but it’s hard because I know I’m not a permanent member of this community...
...will reduce its faculty by nearly 10 percent and cut some academic and athletic programs to cope with a budget deficit after Hurricane Katrina, leaving some of the students who are spending the semester at Harvard with mixed feelings about moving to New Orleans in the spring. Sarah M. Hattier, a New Orleans-born sophomore from Tulane, said she welcomes the changes, which come after recovery efforts that have cost the university about $200 million. “Being in an environment of change and revival will contribute to my experience,” Hattier wrote in an e-mail...
...even if they decide to apply as fall transfer students, should not be forced to return to Tulane in January and face a semester of uncertainty. Some Tulane upperclassmen, on the other hand, criticized their freshmen counterparts at Harvard for not wanting to return to New Orleans. Sarah M. Hattier, a visiting Tulane sophomore, believes that Tulane freshmen should honor their agreement with Harvard and return to Tulane next semester. “If they’d like to apply for fall, that would be fine; they wouldn’t be breaking their agreement with Harvard. I feel...
...don’t think we’re going back in January,” Hattier said. There was no need to say “Tulane,” or even “home...
Back home, she was telling Hattier, there was a boat on the steps of the athletic center, and the parking garage had imploded and covered the cars with pink fuzz. Hattier, whose Lakeview home near the infamous 17th Street Canal was all but destroyed, carved into a grapefruit half...