Word: noted
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...painful and a bit too retro for the sensibilities of modern-day Granola men and women.2) Do not put random patches in your clothes if there are no holes.3) Do not put a “Stop Violence” pin on your back pack. No one will note the reference and then actually stop violence...
...would be less heated. Student bodies at the business schools of Stanford and the University of Chicago have done end-runs around official policy by banding together to enforce no-release policies over the official optional release policies of their schools. Since students own their grades, as the Staff note, they should be able to do with them what they want. HBS administrators, however, are saying that if this optional release policy is adopted, it will supersede any actions by students. This means that HBS, which needed student support to push through the no-release policy back...
...dancing classes over the summer before my freshman year. It was a very diverse class, considering I was used to ballet class with 15 other teenage girls just like myself. In the ballroom classes, dancers ranged from teenage girls to 50-year-old men. And it was interesting to note that peoples’ dancing abilities might not necessarily follow one’s preconceived notions about that dancer.Joining Harvard’s ballroom dancing team that fall, Mariko soon benefited from the training and visiting professional dancing coaches.The Harvard team provides training for all dancers, those who have...
...record study group. In his speech, he likened an “egocentric band”—with a lead singer who cares only about himself—to an authoritarian regime, the students said. The study group ended on an amusing but sour note when a Parrot Head from the audience requested that Buffett play a song. When Buffett tried to tune the fan’s child-sized guitar, one of the strings snapped. “We were all sad,” says Daren S. Stanaway...
...each school and added to an online searchable database.To argue that the BARWS standards violate free speech, Calvary and the ACSI will need to prove that admissions standards were not content-neutral; in other words, that they were targeted to restrict religious speech specifically. It is important to note that there is no such things as a completely neutral standard—every decision to include or exclude involves some degree of value judgement—but the assumption behind content-neutrality is that the decision to exclude is not based on the specific content of the speech in question...