Word: undergrad
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Especially when I started walking—people said that was really scary.” The job might not have been ideal, but Lin thinks she had the right idea: “You can be kind of goofy. You’re an undergrad at a career fair, and this is the complete opposite of how you would normally act.” The $25 an hour didn’t hurt either; that’s how much i-bankers make, right? Woohoo...
Decorating a room can be tough. Decisions such as which posters to buy at the Coop, whether or not to get a TV, and whether bed risers are a delightful use of space (or just a drunken fort waiting to happen), are all serious questions that every undergrad has to grapple with at some point. Hitler posters and shrines to Barbra Streisand are usually good indicators of latent wacko tendencies (and bad b.o.), but extreme cases aside, how much does your room really say about you? In order to answer this question, FM grabbed two strangers and tested each...
Introductory economics and life science courses, which were the two most popular classes last fall, round out the top three for largest undergrad enrollment...
...professor is going to spend $5,000 of his grant to give an undergrad a night on a telescope,” he said. “But with this data, you could conceivably be doing research as a freshman that would turn into a publishable paper...
...entrants] will be intellectual—people really have strong feelings on the subject,” Schachter wrote, “and a little careerist—wouldn’t it be great to get a piece published in The New York Times Magazine as an undergrad...