Word: hazel
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...years since, Mackinnon has seen her academic life fold into her extracurricular life, with her studies focused on the things she feels passionate about. Her mentor and advisor, Hazel Associate Professor in the Social Sciences Peter E. Gordon, writes in an email that in her academic work, “[Mackinnon] has a quiet intensity to her, and there is a discerning, moral disposition that characterizes all of her thought...
...blowing in his head. He liked it. He bared his teeth. He had never seen them quite this way before. So even! So white! They vibrated from perfection. And his square jaw ... that chin with the perfect cleft in it ... his thick, thatchy light brown hair ... those brilliant hazel eyes ... his! Right there in the mirror--him!" To read it is to feel both the dizzy joy of intoxication and the impending hangover, not through anything Wolfe tells us but from the altered, manic rhythms of the prose alone...
...really glad it’s over,” said Republican Christina L. Hazel, a senior at Baylor University in Waco, Texas. “I am happy that America came out and voted in record numbers...
...horny 16-year-old juvenile delinquent who steals purses after his family is kicked out of the house. “She’s some woman,” he tells his mother, when she asks about the owner of one wallet. The primary uncaring figure, though, is Hazel (Andrew G. Sullivan ’06), the family’s colored maid, played by a white man in drag. A physically imposing woman—Sullivan is built like a football player—Hazel is just as likely to pull off the tablecloth...
...looked up a few of the studies. In one, former Hazel Associate Professor of the Social Sciences Nalini Ambady asked undergraduate test subjects to fill out CUE Guide questionnaires for several teaching fellows based on 10-second video clips filmed during actual section meetings. To an astonishing degree of accuracy, the subjects’ scores matched those that the TFs actually got from their real students at the end of a semester. Apparently, it takes real students very little time—seconds, really—to form long-lasting and detailed judgments about their teachers. Psychologists argue that...