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...life and philosophical outlook.“I think about [destiny] all the time, but I don’t really have any sure answers about it,” he says. “I feel like there’s omens all around when you??re looking for them.” TRUE TO LIFEFergus muses over existential issues, and literary influences abound. He considers screenwriting a matter of simply putting a new spin on the classics.“I think stories are not created, they’re kind of discovered...
...spoke about the psychological benefit of receiving early admission to the College, saying he thought students would miss that perk under the new policy. But Avery said that much of the perceived psychological effect is just an “urban myth.” “If you??re smart, you realize that nothing you do between November and December will have any effect,” he said. “As long as you don’t rob a bank.” —Staff writer Malcom A. Glenn...
...predecessor to the Amazing Race—the matza has survived as the premier kosher-for-Passover sports nutrition. Some have even called our unleavened loaves Rabbi-Grain Power Bars (some meaning me). Once you see what a great venue two matzas make for a truly energizing sandwich, you??ll find it no surprise that Harvard’s greatest Jewish student athletes scarf them down like they’re…um…drier, less salty, saltines. Great Jewish athletes throughout the generations have known that even though we are remembering an exodus, the show...
...study shows that “individual referees give more advantage than would be expected by chance.” He added that the effect is more pronounced with some referees than others. “Who you get as a referee tells you how much home advantage you??re going to get,” he said. Harvard football coach Tim Murphy said that while he hasn’t seen any officiating bias in the Ivy League, his experiences as a coach elsewhere supported Boyko’s findings. “When...
...you??re still reading, you??re one of millions for whom Obama is anything but passé, and we need only hear him speak to see why. The secret to Obama’s success lies, to use the words of a certain senator, in his extremely “articulate” rhetoric. His stirring presidential announcement, for instance, smacked strongly of two great orators: Presidents John F. Kennedy ’40 and Abraham Lincoln. His public image lives and dies with his successful impressions...