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...Indeed, in our generation’s frenzied opposition to awkwardness, we have become the very thing we so desperately sought to avoid. Instead of risking mispronouncing our roommate’s name, we spend three years coming up with inventive terms of endearment. Rather than call someone, we send text messages that take up three whole screens...

Author: By Alexandra A. Petri | Title: Generation Awkward | 12/8/2008 | See Source »

...want students to take our message of joy rather than the message that the platforms send,” Koenigs says. “We hope students don’t take us seriously...

Author: By Carola A. Cintron-arroyo and Marianna N Tishchenko, CONTRIBUTING WRITERSS | Title: Hooligan Bids for Presidency | 12/8/2008 | See Source »

...green platform,” says James, who is pursuing a secondary field in Environmental Science and Public Policy. “Harvard needs to set a precedent.”“As students, we need to teach the administration. Wouldn’t it send a powerful message if we were able to go paperless in five years?” Wong asks.James says he realizes, however, that bringing about environmental reforms is ”not going to be an overnight process.”But winning this year’s highly competitive election...

Author: By Ellen X. Yan, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: James, Wong Eager To Serve | 12/8/2008 | See Source »

...link the termbill Web site in order to opt out of the fee. By 2007, that link disappeared. Instead, one had to write an email explaining why he or she did not want to pay the $75. Moreover, by 2008 one had to handwrite that same letter and send it to the Student Receivables Office. There is, in short, an obvious and disturbing pattern toward making the opt-out process more annoying and time-consuming than it ever should have been...

Author: By Matthew H. Ghazarian | Title: Opting Out of Opt-Outs | 12/8/2008 | See Source »

...This year’s Handbook for Students defines the UC fee and describes the opt-out process as “checking the appropriate box” on one’s July student bill. However, the termbill Web site explains that students must handwrite a letter and send it to the Student Receivables Office by September 30th. The printed information in the Handbook for Students mentions no such cut-off date and nothing about a letter. Having to fact-check the Handbook on this issue, only deepens the confusion surrounding the opt-out process. Once again, no matter...

Author: By Matthew H. Ghazarian | Title: Opting Out of Opt-Outs | 12/8/2008 | See Source »

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