Word: homelessness
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...will do an extra year.” But whether it leads him to rags or riches, Carbone’s passions are fixed; as he tells the Crimson, “I’m in it for the music if it leaves me poor and homeless. There’s always a job, but my career and love will always be music.”While it’s common for an alienated teenager with a guitar to dream of selling out shows at Madison Square Garden, studying at Harvard tends to temper dreams of rock stardom...
...style in one sentence: The Kroks call it “homeless chic,” but I just call it “pretty recently washed...
...into the Himalayas by helicopters and pack mules, but the scale of the catastrophe is overwhelming. According to the UN, nearly half a million people are still in need of food, medical help and tents. Their need is all the more urgent as icy winter storms bear down on homeless victims. "There is very little time left," says James Morris, executive director of the World Food Program. Meanwhile, the UN has launched another appeal for emergency earthquake funds, claiming that so far only 5% of the needed $272 million dollars was actually delivered by donors...
...into medicine. I was just caught up in the people and the activities I enjoyed. Out of all the classmates I spent time with, perhaps only one or two were “science people,” which also means they probably won’t be homeless in two years. The rest of us found our academic happiness—not to mention success—in debating social and moral issues, or in attempting amateur literary and historical analysis. In my first few weeks at Harvard, I did attend an information session about preparing oneself...
...that killed over 40,000 Pakistanis (“A Truly Global University,” Oct. 14) deserves high praise. His is the first voice out of Harvard to speak out and question why the University with its billions is being miserly in donating to the millions left homeless. Such an uncharitable attitude from the world’s richest academic institution only betrays a callous bias against people far off and thus out of Harvard’s radar...