Word: applicationã
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...reading guides to recruiting and revising her application. By the end of vacation, she had mastered the lingo of self-promotion, citing her “strong quantitative abilities” and “passion for numbers” in the all-important cover letter. Horan submitted her application??which highlighted her role as Vice President of Harvard’s Women in Business organization and organizer of Junior Parents weekend—to 30 companies. Only six offered her a first round interview...
...these students was Carrie, a junior in Winthrop House. Carrie felt the application??which asked vague questions such as “Why do you want to participate on an ASB trip?” and “Do you have experience with tools?”—was “fairly random.” The 10-minute interviews trip leaders conducted with applicants, moreover, left Carrie asking her own questions. “How do you determine from an application who is better at doing community service,” she writes...
Furthermore, the laws that govern these television broadcasts are ludicrous in their arbitrary application??to the point of absurdity. The traditional few-second delay of live performances allows for only verbal indiscretions to be deleted, while more flagrant displays of inappropriate behavior are left for public consumption. As for the words deleted, the determination of what can and cannot be said (and when) on network television is bound by complicated legal codes. Due to this strange condition, for last week’s Grammy Awards telecast, CBS employed an astounding 5-minute video delay to preempt...
...that a number of leading institutions are disregarding NACAC’s rule allowing Early Decision applicants to also apply Early Action—Princeton, Brown, Yale, Stanford and now Harvard all limit their early candidates to one early application??NACAC has decided to delay enforcement until it can review its definition, according to Martin A. Wilder, NACAC vice president for admission, counseling and enrollment practices...
According to FiCom chair Joshua A. Barro ’05, the application??announced in an e-mail on Monday—was pulled because other FiCom members were concerned that they were not consulted before the application was put up on the website...