Word: ops
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...There was a bit of a divide within Dudley House between people living on their own in apartments and people living in the Co-ops,” Pizer said. “The Masters had their teas, there were intramural sports things, but most of us in the Co-op were not particularly involved in those things...
...until the 1970s, LGBT students “lived on a campus that probably had a climate more akin to that of 1920 than that of today,” Jennings wrote in an op-ed for The Crimson...
...amidst the huge ten-year controversy its construction continued without fail. Each Harvard alumnus who participated gave hundreds of hours of devotion and time. The Atlantic Monthly Editor James M. Fallows ’70, a former President of The Harvard Crimson, in two hours wrote and placed an op-ed in the Washington Post to blow the whistle on an egregious move by opponents of the design. People with connections to Harvard were numerous among those who made the wall possible...
...op-ed “Volcanic Ash Allowing,” I’m not sure what Pierpaolo Barbieri has in mind when he calls for “fully determined models delivering certainty.” Perhaps he is referring to the models peddled by certain misguided financiers. But to suggest that the entire profession of economics engages in an extreme kind of wishful thinking, or worse, deception, is grossly unfair and misleading. Cobb-Douglas will not predict economic growth in the way that Newton’s Laws describe motion, but it generates crucial insights into economic...
...Harvard for its attitude towards the writing scene. Abram says that Harvard’s liberal arts curricula and the access it provides to “intelligent and passionate people” are two reasons why the College has a strong literary tradition. In the Dudley House Co-op, Abram says he found a “vibrant community” that awarded him “interesting and rich material” for his writing...