Word: searched
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...video’s focus is a car headlight that shines through the woods encountering people in distress, but the search seems more like a deer hunt than a rescue. “How to Save a Life” suggests that the video will provide a tutorial in rescues; in reality, the title is blatantly misleading because no one is saved. In fact, people are dying all over the place. The lead singer, rather than doing any life-saving, just sits at his piano lamenting his inactivity. “How to Lose a Life” would...
Students’ views on the next president can provide search committees with a unique perspective, American Council on Education spokesman Paul Hassen said. But he added that search committees may be looking for a different type of candidate...
...nine search committee members are also fellows of the Harvard Corporation, the University's top governing board. About a week before Summers resigned in February, the Corporation's senior fellow, James R. Houghton '58, pressured the embattled president to leave his post. Houghton is now leading the search for Harvard's next president...
...preparing a report for the nine-member search panel, though it has decided that the report will not be released to the public until the new president is named and can review the results with the student group, Murray said...
...affirms that “Harvard teaches you to be a better questioner…you can be heard even if you aren’t in the mainstream.” In addition to rapping and politicking, Ramaswamy is one of three College representatives on the Presidential Search Committee and is involved with the South Asian Association, club tennis, and intramural sports. “Vivek has a boundless capacity to get things done,” says friend Nicholas R. Green ’07. Though described as fearless by his peers, when reflecting on his undergraduate career...