Word: transcripts
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When I came to college, I knew I wanted to be a good student, I wanted to learn, I wanted to get the most out of Harvard. I also thought I could measure my success in these areas with the marks on my transcript. But I didn’t realize at the time that maintaining a serious interest in my GPA would require giving up interests in other activities and pursuits. Consequently, I spent the last three and a half years sacrificing sleep and socializing to turn problem sets and response papers into check-plusses rather than checks...
...course that very afternoon. And yet it was somehow unsurprising, as I had not yet taken the course’s strict prerequisite and found myself overcommitted to extracurricular pursuits (namely, four Ghungroo performances from March 4-6). But here’s the bottom line: although my final transcript will contain nearly 40 courses, I will be unable to graduate this June. That’s right. My degree will be sent to me in November. Not only did such misfortune jeopardize my previously formulated summer plans (though admittedly Cambridge weather is quite pleasant during the summer), it also...
...quote from Rumsfeld’s taped, transcribed interview with Woodward, in which he described telling Bandar that he could “take that to the bank this is going to happen,” has mysteriously been deleted from the Pentagon’s version of the transcript. Also deleted by the Pentagon (but, luckily, preserved in Woodward’s transcript, according to the Washington Post) is the following incredible statement from Rumsfeld: “We’re going to have to clean some of this up in the transcript. We’ll give...
...Bush might find subtler ways to use Kerry's words and record against him. When Americans try to gauge whether a politician is liberal or conservative, they look at more than his resume or transcript. "The liberal moniker is as much a cultural label as it is about a voting record," observes Democratic political consultant Anita Dunn. So which Kerry will the country come to see--the one in duck boots, shaped by a Swiss boarding school and Yale secret society? Or the one in sweats and khaki, baptized in the Mekong Delta...
...turned out to help him: the summary of an interrogation of an anonymous al-Qaeda leader, believed to be Ramzi Binalshibh, naming the members of the Hamburg cell - which excluded Mzoudi. Prosecutors wanted the US to produce Binalshibh for live cross-examination, or at least cough up the full transcript of his interrogation, so they could try to prove him a liar. But fearing their intelligence work would be compromised, the Americans refused. Absent proof of Mzoudi's knowing complicity, the court had to release him. It's a good thing for Mzoudi he doesn't live in Britain...