Word: lovingly
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...because they're following their passion," Brooks says. "The saddest thing to me is seeing someone take a job just because it pays well, and then spend all that money on toys to cheer them up for being miserable in their job. People who are doing what they love hardly feel they're working at all, just living...
...leave the music building, she discovers it’s snowing. Cameron dances in a little circle in her four inch heels and lime green coat. “I love snow!” she shouts...
...students. While many of Harvard’s nearly 4,000 international students intend to stay in the United States to work, others, like Ivan Z. Posavec ’10 and Zeina Oweis ’11, echo the study’s findings. “I love the United States, but I miss home, I miss my parents, my brothers,” said Posavec, a native of Serbia. “I cannot see myself spending the rest of my life thousands of miles away from here.” Oweis said that many international students...
...cool teens. What a city. Ol’ Beantown! Four, of course you’ll get a job. You’re the most elite students in the country. Five, the girls here are smoke shows. The cat’s pajamas. Six, you will learn to love having seasons. It’s only cold a few months a year. Seven, yeah, we always have grass in the Yard. Who wants to play some Ultimate?! Eight, your parents’ love is unconditional...
...might conflict. [The scouts will say] you don’t know what you’re talking about, you never played.”But Rosenfeld believes that thinking about sports quantitatively simply adds a new perspective.“It’s really just people who love the game like everyone else but are trying to add a factor in there to add an edge,” he says.And to those who claim that focusing so intently on statistical analysis detracts from the more lyrical aspects of athletics, Harvard Professor of Statistics and Faculty Advisor...