Word: tvã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...suddenly seemed struck by something he had not yet noticed. “Wow,” he observed, “this place is huge. It’s gotta be at least eight times the size of Noch’s…and it has TV??s…and….” I smiled, for my friend had just discovered one of the reasons why many Quadlings love life in “exile...
...good to watch, as long as you keep flipping through the channels. We are mesmerized for hours. This process doesn’t just devour the couch potato’s time, but that of his roommates, too. Even if roommates aren’t drawn in by the TV??s hypnotic power, few students can study effectively with MTV blasting in the next room...
...arrival of Harvard alum Ryan Pierce on The West Wing is nothing unusual; primetime is already crawling with Harvard graduates. Whether working in an army hospital in Korea or getting reprimanded for their short skirts, TV??s fictional Harvard alumni share a single common trait: they make one extremely telegenic facebook...
...spent a semester living in Quincy House as a visiting student from Emory University and went on to receive an Masters degree in Public Policy from the Kennedy School of Government (KSG) in 1994—would know. If Harvard seems well-represented on the resumes of TV??s White House power brokers, it may be because so many of the show’s producers and writers themselves traversed the winding paths of the Yard. In addition to Goffman, Harvard trained three of the show’s producers: Eli Attie ’89, Lawrence...
...policy “will improve the quality of local news and support free over-the-air broadcast television,” many have seen through Bush’s usual rhetorical wiles. Conservative columnist William Safire recently corrected Bush’s “free TV?? notion, pointing out that “four-fifths of broadcast network TV is now delivered to homes by cable or satellite—not free—and NBC, ABC, CBS, and Fox are making money hand over fist,” not to mention the muddy logic...