Word: othersã
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...dress rehearsal last Friday, the 26 young participants—who speak different languages and represent almost every continent—ate pizza, joked and braided each others??€™ hair...
...procession—which included singers and guitarists from Carrasco’s class, Lowell House Master Diana C. Eck and Professor of Mathematics Noam Elkies, among others??€”began in front of Eck’s residence with a dialogue in song between would-be lodgers and innkeepers...
...lack the resources to thoroughly scrutinize a mountain of applications. For these schools, a point system is a legitimate alternative. Michigan’s undergraduate admissions system assigns points to a wide variety of different criteria—grade point average, SAT score, essay, legacy status and race, among others??€”and then admits its first-year class based on composite score. This policy is substantially the same as Harvard’s; it merely quantifies the factors that Harvard considers. In a point system, applicants still compete directly against one another for the same spots using the same...
Peter J. Giordano ’04, a friend since the two were first-years, said when he and Smith lived across the hall last year, they spent hours “just crashing at each others??€™ rooms, hanging out and laughing...
...common gripes seems to do more to make our time here negative than the actual conditions we are complaining about. The reason this overwhelming negative attitude about Harvard persists is that most of us perceive that we have nowhere to channel our legitimate gripes. We then feed off each others??€™ grievances, trying to one-up each other, until we are left with a boiling pot of self pity. Because we hear these exaggerated problems over and over without resolution, we come to accept them as truths, making our perception of Harvard much worse than reality. Our complaints become...