Word: vibrant
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...don’t get on with the group have to either lump it, retreat from socializing or make extraordinary efforts to find the few strong extracurricular communities that exist (such as the Oxford Debating Union).Perversely, Harvard’s Community deficiency has created a campus culture of vibrant extracurricular activities that double as social organizations. And it is here that real communities are to be found, amongst the sci-fi boffins, dance classes and even The Salient’s cozy Burke Reading Group. Much like the workplace after college, they are a mix of social...
...good looks and a charming European accent means you’ll manage little more in the way of conversation than a few fawning smiles and gushing “ahhhs.” The quirky teachers and strange advising policies are just a couple aspects of a rather vibrant concentration. In spite of a lack of difficult requirements, other than a thesis for honors, HAA will keep you on your toes. Just try to stay awake...
Since 2000, sales of performance wear have increased an average of 20% a year, making it a vibrant growth sector in the sporting-goods industry. Americans spend around $38 billion annually on sports apparel, with $12 billion going toward performance wear, and that does not include footwear. According to the SGMA, while sales in the performance sector continue to expand, those in other sectors remain flat...
...Food in the square: Cambridge is renowned for being a vibrant college town, but grocery stores are nowhere to be found near the Yard. If you land in a union dorm, you’ll be just a short walk from Broadway Market, an overpriced but well-stocked and delicious supermarket. And on your way to class, you can grab a cup of Starbuck’s around the corner...
...most profitable companies, famously claiming to have slept only two hours a night on his road to success. He resigned in disgrace in 2004 after being convicted of illegally tapping the phone of a journalist who had written negative articles on the company. DIED. Melissa Hayden, 83, lyrical, vibrant ballerina who became an international standout in George Balanchine's famously starless New York City Ballet; in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Such was her status in a company known for downplaying individual artists that when she announced her retirement in 1973, Balanchine created a work in her honor, Cortege Hongrois, that...