Word: prided
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...Harvard is not like a state school, where having a good football team is all that inspires pride in people,” Stoeckel says...
...Harvard pride runs in the family. Her brother, Luke, graduated from the College in 2001 and her sister, Emily, will enter as a first-year in the fall. At the head of her family is James W. Stoeckel ’74, an All-Ivy quarterback who won the Bushnell Cup as the league’s best football player...
...improving the squad, she says she hoped that overall spirit and pride in cheering on the Crimson teams would swell. Stoeckel worked as a recruiter, and made sure that the squad was constantly working to improve itself—both practicing and watching videos of better squads around the company...
...world. Harvard is perhaps the most famous American university outside of this country. With all this renown comes responsibility: to admit frankly how little we know, to seek knowledge of others and of ourselves—indeed to see ourselves as others see us—and to avoid pride, even when others accord us pride of place...
...less than a day, members of the class of 2003 can officially call themselves Harvard graduates. Such a title contains countless perks—the ability to wear crimson with pride, drink cocktails at posh Harvard clubs and give one’s children a leg up in college admissions are just the beginning. But there are potential drawbacks associated with the Ivy seal of approval. The perfect example: the proverbial “H-Bomb” and its inevitable mixed reactions. Some treat Harvard grads with awe, others with revulsion. Harvard Professor of Psychology Ellen J. Langer admits...