Word: inbox
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...wireless campus united by facebook.com, Blackberries, and inbox-choking e-mail lists, e-mail blunders are a part of everyday life. But while students might endure embarrassment for accidentally replying-all to a House list, or for sending sensitive information to the wrong e-mail address, most don’t expect their Teaching Fellow (TF) to broadcast section feedback to their entire class. Last Thursday, Joshua S. King, the head TF for English 13, “The English Bible,” accidentally sent out an e-mail meant only for TF Eliza E. Young...
...mail continued, “this is the most confidential part of our punch process (and our club), and our punches are not even supposed to know that such a thing exists (nor are non-members). Imagine how horrible it would be if this were sitting in your inbox, even months from now, and by accident some non-member (or punch) ever...
...otherwise all the work will never get done,” he says.He used to take the applications home with him, but decided to do all his reading in his office to make sure he does not lose any.Upon reaching his office each morning, he checks his inbox, his e-mail, and his voicemail; orders the communications in order of difficulty and urgency; and responds to them accordingly. His day revolves around reading applications and meetings with staff members and Fitzsimmons. Evans regularly contacts the Harvard Foundation, on whose board he sits, to see how he can help...
...Zangrilli, who graduated from Dartmouth with Grey last spring, writes in an e-mail. “The...philosophy is extremist, primitive, and self-destructive, but it’s still pretty damn funny,” he adds. But judging from the company’s inbox, not everyone agrees. “It bothers me that these ideas in any way, shape, or form would be associated with gender identities at Dartmouth,” Molly D. Jenkins, who graduated from Dartmouth in 2004, writes in an e-mail to The Crimson. “They need...
...with fantasies of stress-free afternoons in independent coffee shops, far away from the stress, work, and worry of Harvard College.As one can well imagine, my arrival here constituted a bit of a rude awakening.Early in my freshman year, extracurricular commitments began to conflict with each other, and my inbox started overflowing with the e-detritus of untold many open lists. I realized quickly that free time at Harvard is really an illusion, and that a choice among the Square’s three Starbucks franchises doesn’t amount to much free choice at all. As the reality...