Word: sisters
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Tran, who has an older sister already in college, said that his departure will mean the onset of empty nest syndrome for a close family...
...back and took in the omnipresent smell of sea salt and smoke and the shimmering silhouettes of overly-friendly jellyfish. Yet I could not escape the thought that my brother was no longer an undergrad like me. He was now a husband, honeymooning in Bora Bora with my new sister-in-law. The image was too heavy to bear. And so I contented myself by musing upon whether the couple would celebrate their first year anniversary with equal fanfare, and whether that meant we would all return to Juan-les-Pins and its gentle way of life sometime soon...
Rebecca J. R. Steinberg ’07, a Crimson editorial editor, is a psychology concentrator in Quincy House. She is still getting used to the idea of a sister-in-law. And yes, her brother did go to Yale...
...came to this country when I was about three years old from Quito, Ecuador, with my younger sister and my mother and father. Coming here was not easy for anyone. My parents came to America with two little girls and with only a small amount of money...
...There were many reasons why my parents chose to come live in America. They believed that America would be a better place to raise children. My mother believed that if my sister and I were raised here, we would get better opportunities and have a chance at a better future. If I were thirteen and still living in Ecuador my life would probably be so much different than it is now. I wouldn't speak two languages, because I never would have learned English. I don't think I would be where I am now and I don't think...