Word: wellesley
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...SOCH celebrates the grand opening of the Cinema in the Quad Library with Meredith and Co. The popcorn’s hot and buttery, just like McSteamy. Thurs., Sept. 27 at 9 p.m. Hilles, Radcliffe Quad. 4) You Cruise. They Cruise. Icruise. Mingle with the international students from MIT, Wellesley and Harvard as you sail down the Charles. Cocktail attire is a required, but an accent is optional. Fri., Sept. 28 at 10 p.m. 60 Rowes Wharf, Boston Harbor. $15/single, $25/couple. 5) I Wear My Sunglasses At Night… Just like ZZ Top! Admit it. You?...
...continued, as most personal ads do, with a description of his desired mate: “You must be white, 5’6”-5’9”, young, blonde, attractive, and intelligent. You must be in school, preferably Tufts or Wellesley but BU and BC are acceptable (definitely not MIT). You should be able to hold a conversation, know when to be quiet, and polite in all your behavior. I have seen unruly guests embarrass members before…This event is black-tie, and I am willing to procure an evening gown...
THESE ARE THE KINDS OF THOUGHTS THAT occupy Yale economist Robert Shiller, who with Karl Case of Wellesley has done more than anyone else to document the postmillennium real estate boom and warn about the inevitable bust. Shiller first made his name in the early 1980s attacking the notion, then widely accepted, that the stock market rationally reflects the true value of the companies whose shares are traded on it. He and real estate specialist Case then teamed up to show that home prices are even more subject to booms and busts than stocks. They did it by measuring repeat...
...lenders Countrywide and Washington Mutual subsequently issued dire warnings about losing liquidity because so few people want to buy mortgages on the secondary market right now. "One of the most interesting things is, we don't know who's going to suffer," says Karl Case, a housing economist at Wellesley College. "Obviously, the people who get foreclosed against suffer. That goes without saying. But who bears the losses ultimately is really complex." We can start with the stock markets around the world, which have surrendered $3 trillion in value over the past month, thanks in large part to the mortgage...
...Even though she has never graduated from a Harvard school or held a University teaching post, Keohane says she has drawn on a wealth of “informal connections” to Harvard in order to navigate her role. When Keohane was president of Wellesley, her husband chaired Harvard’s government department. Keohane served on the visiting committee for the Kennedy School of Government under three different deans, including two years when she was the committee’s chair, and even worked for the University as an office assistant over one summer...