Word: idealizes
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...project’s message, he was reluctant to answer directly. “I don’t like to have work that can be explained in one way,” Camacho says. “In essence, the project was destabilizing the idea of an ideal, comfortable home.” Although Camacho is technically on the film-video track within the Visual and Environmental Studies concentration, he used his senior thesis to explore a different medium. “It’s kind of liberating,” he says of the change. Having grown...
...cases like his are few and far between, and some addresses end up as slightly embarrassing. Margaret M. Wang ’09 chose “Mmwang.” Wang insists she meant it to be a joke. When asked what their ideal e-mail aliases would be, both Zhao (2) and (mm)Wang said they would have used their full names. “Each name is going to be more unique and more memorable than numbers,” said Wang. According to Sundquist, the measure could conceivably be implemented soon enough to benefit the Class...
...were more traditional, with a caramel glaze and roasted pecans and raisins inside,” Meites said. “I think flavor-wise both were very good, but in terms of quality of dough and overall balance between flavor, presentation, and what you would imagine the ideal sticky bun to be, Joanne won out over Bobby Flay...
...Harvard College’s Committee on the Objectives of a General Education in a Free Society wrote, “Education […] must uphold at the same time tradition and experiment, the ideal and the means, subserving, like our culture itself, change within commitment.” FAS ignores this credo today, hemming students into low-risk, safety courses—or else leaving us to risk squandering all chance of a good grad school. Only a decisive policy change can resurrect Harvard’s commitment to the pursuit of real scholarship...
...trade systems and fuel economy standards? Where do the Kerrys stand on whether the federal government should use its power to alter personal behavior, either through taxing carbon fuels or subsidizing small-scale renewable energy systems? And what about global environmental agreements—such as how an ideal Kyoto Protocol should be structured—and the sorts of environmental protections should be written into free trade deals? These final questions should be second-nature to Kerry, a long-time member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.Like advertised, the Kerrys’ book is a fine complement...