Word: low-key
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...lying if I said my victory hasn’t gone to my head. It sounds absurd, but the title does carry with it ambassadorial responsibilities. Attaching the word “Harvard” to anything suddenly makes it important to the outside world. After conducting a low-key interview with The Crimson, I found a link to the article on the Wall Street Journal’s Online Opinion Journal. The heading? “What does this say about Harvard Women?” Soon after, I got a call from the Chronicle of Higher Education...
Defying the expectations of pretty much everyone except himself, his coach Timothy Murphy and fellow Crimson NCAA entrant junior Dan Shevchik, Cole excelled in his typically muted, low-key style...
Summers’ goal of involving the wider College community—from Faculty to staff to their families—in the event is laudable. Increased funding and attendance may help make Harvard’s traditionally low-key Springfest more like the rollicking festivals held at other colleges, such as Brown has. More money might draw bigger-name bands, better rides and a more exciting atmosphere. In order to allow ample time to plan an event on this larger scale, Summers’ office should provide the Undergraduate Council with details of his plans to fund the event...
Friends and acquaintances saw Fastow as a low-key family man. Attorney Robert Lapin, who has known him for a dozen years, calls him "modest, unassuming, not at all self-aggrandizing." At his temple, Congregation Or Ami, Fastow spent time helping shape some of the congregation's education programs along nontraditional lines. Says Rabbi Shaul Osadchey: "He was one of those people who could think outside...
...Friends and acquaintances saw Fastow as a low-key family man. Attorney Robert Lapin, who has known him for a dozen years, calls him "modest, unassuming, not at all self-aggrandizing." At his temple, Congregation Or Ami, Fastow spent time helping shape some of the congregation's education programs along nontraditional lines. Says Rabbi Shaul Osadchey: "He was one of those people who could think outside...