Word: youã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Listening to Sam D.G. Jacoby ’08, you??d think there was a tiny factory—one as enchanting as the Santa’s toy workshop—hidden in the basement of Adams House. “From the street, you can look through the windows and see these massive machines with people wearing aprons bent over them, hard at work on mysterious old-timey tasks,” Jacoby says. The view from inside isn’t much different. The space smells like oil and metal, the walls are plastered with...
...interview, in which she says, “...don’t tell anyone this...OMG, this is really dorky...but I’m also a certified Underwater Naturalist, which means I basically know all the names of the fish and stuff.” OMG, Fiona, you??re so smart. And sexy, too, as shown in the multiple shots of the grad wearing relatively modest clothes (then what’s the point?), including a particularly disturbing one of her with a photoshopped-in tiger…fierce. Fiona explains that she chose...
...line in Annenberg. “Be secretive,” says one wise and weathered junior. “Because people are just meeting each other and they want to gossip. If you give them something to talk about, they will talk about it.” You??ve got four years to develop a reputation, so there’s no rush. Remaining inconspicuous, however, can seem impossible at Harvard, which is why it is essential to master the inevitable “walk of shame” (“stride of pride?...
...respectful of your roommates. Just because your half of the bunkbed might feel like a cozy sanctuary does not mean it actually is. Your roommate might wait until graduation to tell you this, but they can always hear you. ALWAYS. And don’t think you??re being respectful by moving things into the common room. Your roommates will eventually realize that the mysterious stains on the futon are not from Chinese takeout...
...with it. It’s embedded in the culture. If you really ask around the country, how many admissions officers can tell you at their institution what the predictive validity of the test is? What does it add to our understanding? What do tests help you predict? You??d find a lot of them equate these tests with intelligence. It’s not an intelligence test.”It is certainly refreshing to see leading figures in American higher education awaken to the fact that a high SAT score does not necessarily equal a qualified...