Word: stipend
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...could be derived from” the evolution of children’s fashion. The project—like its author—is silly and self-indulgent, a perfect example of the frivolity of the intellectual class. In the mean time, Marina lives on a small stipend from her parents, hobnobs with New York’s cultural elite, and pines listlessly for a life of greater meaning and seriousness...
...city ports and fishing villages in Indonesia, and performing with a shadow puppet troupe in Cambodia: these are some of the ventures that recipients of this year’s Rockefeller Memorial Fellowship will undertake next year. This year’s recipients of the fellowship, which offers a stipend of $18,000 to graduating students for a year of purposeful travel, are Matthew A. Busch ’07 of Leverett House, Olivia H. Gage ’07 of Adams House, Emily W. Hogeland ’07 of Currier House, Kelly...
...with are too drunk to do it themselves. As you might imagine, this policy has been a huge boon to perverts on campus and has quadrupled the attendance at our Room 13 counseling group on Wednesday nights. The only downside we can think of is that our stipend hasn’t kept up with the extra cookies and pamphlets that we need to make campus safe. But no matter who wins, we hope things change. This hope is balanced, however, by our certainty that they won’t. Another white man will be elected, he?...
Most recently, Anene served as SAC vice chair for College Life where he was involved in initiatives including the changes in Hilles, the campaign for a women’s center, and Course Costs Assistance Program (C-CAP)—a book stipend program for low-income students...
...have other reasons to celebrate. It was awarded a $100,000 grant by the Heckscher Foundation for Children, a New York-based organization that promotes child welfare, according to Glynn. The grant will fund the CPIC Fund for Service Internship program, which provides 10 students with a $3,500 stipend, housing, and an internship in New York this summer. Cora E. Yamamoto ’75, the Washington, D.C. area coordinator for CPIC, said that when she was an undergraduate at the College, students who were interested in public service careers were out of luck. “There...