Word: sheã
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...kind of love my job.” It is Poilâne’s ability to embrace and elude her corporate life which makes her truly exceptional. “The great thing about Apollonia is that she runs Poilâne like an adult, but she??s able to still step back and be a kid,” says Monyana. “She??s able to strike this balance between super serious and super silly, which I think might be the most impressive part...
...wants to maintain a connection to the native peoples with whose plight she empathizes. But it’s more than that. As much as her reddened, pale skin betrays her legitimate claim to native roots, she unabashedly enjoys her minority status. She revels in playing the underdog. She??s lived the bulk of her American experience impoverished, ostracized by her poor English-speaking skills, feeling culturally dissonant in a structure (the US Army) that demands conformity—and she??ll be damned if she??s going to let skin color...
...hour is too early or idea too obscure for FM’s intrepid photo chair. She??s shadowed Project Runway contestants, created the perfect prop for our sayonara Larry Summers issue, and photoshopped and taken hundreds of photos. Luckily for FM, she??ll be sticking around The Crimson as photo chair next year...
...most interesting seniors at Harvard compares to two-time Olympic glory, Chu is modest. “It’s a great honor,” says Chu. “There are so many talented people here at Harvard.” “I think she??s selfless,” says Katey B. Stone, head coach of Harvard women’s ice hockey. “I can’t say enough...she??s as good as it gets.” Stone is impressed...
Hilary R. Cloos ’96 trots along rural New York and Connecticut county roads, looking for her Cinderella. For the past 10 years, Cloos has spent her days trimming, fitting, and polishing—working hours on end to craft the perfect slipper. When she??s done, the armored hoof is ready for showtime.Cloos, a former Harvard physics concentrator and equestrian team captain, is known in eastern New York as a farrier. Laymen often call her a blacksmith, but while blacksmiths forge iron into many shapes and forms, farriers devote their lives to fitting shoes...