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Word: internship (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Martin S. Bell ’03 is an associate sports chair of The Crimson. Sensing that an internship with the Al-Jazeera television network would be ill-advised this year, the Winthrop House government concentrator snagged a summer gig with Sports Illustrated in the Greatest City in the World...

Author: By Martin S. Bell, | Title: Fear and Clothing in New York | 7/12/2002 | See Source »

Hearing Ferraro’s passionate speech on the first day of my internship really challenged my views about women in politics. How do I reconcile her firm belief in the idea of a female president before the end of the decade with the fact that American women today remain largely underrepresented not only on the presidential level but in the national government as a whole...

Author: By Anat Maytal, | Title: Finding Madam President | 7/12/2002 | See Source »

...when my friend, in return, described his impressive MIT internship as a counselor in the Minority Introduction to Engineering and Science program, my carefree and confident attitude towards my own summer plan began to implode. Mine was not the status quo Harvard student summer. It served no purpose; it imparted no new skills...

Author: By Jasmine J. Mahmoud, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The Joys of Summer | 6/28/2002 | See Source »

...when I compared my summer plans to those of most of my other friends, I soon grasped an irony in my description “absolutely nothing.” It was indeed close to nothing weighed against Anna’s internship, whose recently received postcard detailed her government work in Madrid. It was nothing next to Janie’s travels in the Czech Republic. It was even near nothing when matched to my friends’ experiences here in the States. With New York, D.C. and even the western United States as playgrounds, most people I knew...

Author: By Jasmine J. Mahmoud, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The Joys of Summer | 6/28/2002 | See Source »

...settle for a dead-end job. She is still campaigning hard for something in marketing but is open to other options. "I've done everything you're supposed to do," she says. "I went to a good school, got good grades, played a sport, did a four-year internship and have been networking like crazy." After sending out more than 100 resumes and going on dozens of interviews, she has started giving resumes to people she meets at nightclubs and in coffee shops. When she spoke with TIME, this never-say-die job seeker asked if we could print...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Young & Jobless | 6/10/2002 | See Source »

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