Word: merenda
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...Susan C. Merenda ’07, who is advised by a professor involved in theatre, says that because she already knew that she wanted to study theatre entering Harvard, she might have been just as happy with her Weld proctor as a sole adviser...
...Fairley ’05 put in delightfully sleazy and callous appearances as Menelaos and Agamemnon, providing necessary comic contrast in the midst of the intense melodrama. Kudos, too, to the visually and aurally interesting chorus work of Veronica T. Golin ’07 and Susan C. Merenda ’07. Indeed, the entire cast’s willingness to take their acting to the physical level was extremely commendable. Currun Singh ’07, as Odysseus, seemed bland and unexciting early on, but lost some of his hesitancy in the second...
...Fairley ’05 put in delightfully sleazy and callous appearances as Menelaos and Agamemnon, providing necessary comic contrast in the midst of the intense melodrama. Kudos, too, to the visually and aurally interesting chorus work of Veronica T. Golin ’07 and Susan C. Merenda ’07. Indeed, the entire cast’s willingness to take their acting to the physical level was extremely commendable. Currun Singh ’07, as Odysseus, seemed bland and unexciting early on, but lost some of his hesitancy in the second...
That's the key. "Partnership is not about schools working with businesses or with agencies. Partnership is about relationships, it's about people working with people," says Daniel Merenda. That's truer now than ever. "Schools used to look for businesses that had money because they wanted them to buy things for them," says Kennedy. "Now they are looking more for the human resources...
Like healthy children, good school-business partnerships tend to grow. "It usually starts with employees or an individual getting involved in the life of a child in school," says Merenda, "and as they become more involved and see the needs of the school and understand the complexities of education in today's world, they draw on the resources of their organization or company to get more involved." And typically, what may have begun as a task undertaken to solve a problem becomes a pleasure pursued--just for the satisfaction it brings to everyone involved...