Word: transferals
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...know if I can’t get into Harvard, what I’m going to do. Sometimes I think about it, sometimes I don’t dare to think about it,” high-school junior Haisha Chen says. “Maybe I will transfer to Harvard after a year.” —Staff writer Ying Wang can be reached at yingwang@fas.harvard.edu. —Staff writer Lulu Zhou can be reached at luluzhou@fas.harvard.edu...
...anyway) $12.00. 2) For your fellow Owl member: a beer belt from Newbury Comics, $14.99. 3) For your ex: a $15.00 gift certificate to About Hair (a two-for-one special, a bad haircut, and guaranteed uneasiness). 4) For your friend at Boston University: “How to Transfer to the College of Your Choice” from the Harvard Book Store, $12.95. 5) For that nerdy perv in your entryway: a book of Sudo-Fuk-U from Urban Outfitters, $12.99. 6) For your mom: a Harvard Mug from the Harvard Shop (for the fourth year...
...Though there’s no formal relationship, a significant proportion of each Deep Springs class leaves the desert Harvard-bound. “Over the years, the Transfer Admissions Committee has seen many superb applicants from Deep Springs and has admitted a fair number of those candidates,” E. Marlene V. Rotner, a Harvard senior admissions officer, wrote in an e-mail...
...pursuit of community led Jody S. Morita ’06-’07 to transfer to the Dudley Co-op. Morita, who graduated from Deep Springs in 2003, lived in Quincy House for one semester but promptly put himself on the wait list for the alternative residential option. He was admitted in his second semester. The Dudley Co-op, with its communal meals and intimate style of living, has proved a welcoming home for a number of Deep Spring alums over the years. Alex J. Rothman ’07, another Deep Springs alum, also lives...
...ClimateWell's refrigerator-size unit is absorbed by salt housed in a connected tank the water molecules can't resist sticking to the salt, turning it into a slurry. As water evaporates, it gives up energy, which is then released inside the salt tank. The result of the energy transfer: the water becomes colder as the salt heats up. Pipe water through the slurry into radiators, and the system can heat the home; circulating the cold water will cool...