Word: misse
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition. Du Puy knows he has no chance of winning. He knows he is one of only a handful of humanities concentrators spending six hours in the Science Center trying to solve 12 proofs. But, as he says, “Emotionally I miss math a lot. The exam is like my Peter Pan. I don’t do well but it’s a fun thing to do. It keeps math alive for me. You emerge at the end of the day tired but exhilarated...
...crowned king of endpapers, and the one and only Miss Harvard, William knows how to tug heartstrings as well as he knows how to add salacious details to even the most serious of stories. FM first fell in love with William in the fall of his first year, when he was featured in a Halloween fashion dialogue—dressed as Minnie Mouse. With countless FM stories under his writer’s belt, William brings experience and a vast amount of editorial understanding to the table. The magazine is thrilled to have him committed...
Sari M. Poage ‘05, who served as Miss Teenage San Diego in 2001, said she looks forward to bonding with people who “understand” California—who, for example, could share her memories of high school class cancellations for good surfing weather...
...Asked about the fraternity vote, Lott responded through a spokesman, who said: "Those were different times in a different era. Senator Lott believes that segregation is immoral and repudiates it." The spokesman also notes that Sigma Nu integrated in the late 1960s, and that its Ole Miss chapter now accepts African-Americans...
Lott was a witness to one of the pivotal episodes in that past. During his senior year at Ole Miss, violence erupted there when U.S. marshals moved to install Air Force veteran James Meredith as its first African-American student. Lott was not among the students advocating integration, but did succeed in persuading his fraternity brothers not to join in the rioting. In 1997, Lott told TIME: "Yes, you could say I favored segregation then. I don't now. ? The main thing was, I felt the federal government had no business sending in troops to tell the state what...