Word: texted
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...spoke during the memorial service about her friend’s warmth and generosity of spirit. “She had a grace about her that very few people are blessed with,” Macey said. Macey said that freshman year, Ekperi sent a group of friends a text message that read: “Just a reminder, you are beautiful. Have a great day!” Macey said that Ekperi would have wanted all of them to learn to “share what love we have, smile when we see others, because tomorrow...
Former Fun Czar Zachary A. Corker ’04 is splitting his time between Cambridge and Seattle, juggling renovations of Loker Commons and launching a text message-based carpooling service. This week, Corker, along with college roommate Nicholas A. Shiftan ’04, launched a beta version of GOOSE, a company that uses SMS text messaging to facilitate carpooling in Seattle, Wash.Registered users send a text message to GOOSE, or 46673, indicating their location, their destination, and whether they are looking for a driver or a passenger. Within 10 minutes, the driver and one or more passengers receive...
...deeply sorry for the reactions in some countries to a few passages of my address...which were considered offensive to the sensibility of Muslims,” the pope said five days after the speech at Regensburg, Germany. “These were in fact quotations from a medieval text, which do not in any way express my personal thought...
...Core requirements. Cross-listing makes sense, as a broad array of departmental courses deal with the same skill sets and areas of knowledge as Core classes. Literature and Arts A courses, for example, have no monopoly on questions like “What are the relations among author, reader, text, and the circumstances in which the text is produced?” to quote the Courses of Instruction. Yet the number of cross-listed departmental courses remains agonizingly low. We are stumped as to why English 151, “The 19th Century Novel,” is somehow worthy...
...list more expansive than an average English class. Pessl transforms nouns to verbs (“triple-lutzed”, “couch potatoed”), recites “Casablanca” and German poetry, and boasts an impressive and oft-quoted literary collection; she peppers the text with nods to real historical heroes (Winston Churchill) and imagined ones (“the late great Horace Lloyd Swithin (1844-1917), British essayist, lecturer, satirist and social observer”). Several hand-drawn visual aids—the astute observations of our protagonist—are scattered throughout...