Word: yaleã
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...addition, randomization has significantly changed our House system in recent years. But even in his 1958 description of the Houses, Segal refers to them as, “what makes Harvard—and, I have to admit, Yale??different from every other university in America.” Today, the essential idea behind the Houses has survived: they are designed to help students build relationships with House tutors and masters, foster social interactions, and develop an attachment to a place we can call “home” for three years. In this particular sense, Harvard...
...long and complex history” UPenn’s Corrigan stresses, one with “a rapidly advancing future that impacts virtually every form of knowledge around us.”The business world certainly values the writing and analytical skills honed by the Film Studies major. Yale??s Aaron Gerow, the Director of Undergraduate Studies, Film Studies Program, understands that contemporary demands necessitate a strong department. “With the New York Times calling Film Studies the next MBA,” he says, referencing a March 2005 article, “Film Studies...
...instant too late—but still won. “I don’t think we were clicking on all cylinders, but I think we played a very smart game,” said Crimson coach Ted Donato ’91. And after Yale??about which Donato said, “We weren’t happy with the effort, with the execution, with the intensity and the commitment”—the Harvard skaters heard him loud and clear. “It wasn’t the best video session Monday...
...president at the time. Aside from Summers, Hennesy, Hockfield, and Tilghman, the other presidents to sign yesterday’s statement were: CalTech’s David Baltimore, UC Berkeley’s Robert Birgeneau, UMich’s Mary Sue Coleman, UPenn’s Amy Gutmann, and Yale??s Richard C. Levin. Levin faced protests from graduate students on his campus last February for not condemning Summers’ remarks on women in science. —ZACHARY M. SEWARD
...terms of quality of undergraduate education.And on the Autoadmit bulletin board, a healthy crop of NYCFan detractors has appeared that spends its time recycling old articles about the high crime rate in Cambridge and linking to the FM issue from 2003 called “The Cult of Yale?? in which the Crimson pondered the question of why it was everyone seemed so much happier down in New Haven. This is not, of course, a new phenomenon. For years, scores of books and magazine articles have been written trying to perpetuate or dispel myths about what actually goes...