Word: opened
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...would then be faced with an equally realistic outlook on the Harvard experience. In this revised view, we come into Harvard because we are commanded to do so. "Enter," we are told by our guidance counselors, our families, our internal social barometer. Once the gate is open to us, it is barely possible to do otherwise. But if it was not our choice to come in, is the burden foisted upon us when we leave then especially unfair? Hardly. We did not ask for our intelligence or our privileges, but we did not refuse them, either...
...also true that Harvard's refusal to participate directly in ROTC may discourage some high school students interested in the program from applying to Harvard. But the College's compromise is a reasonable one--MIT is not so far away. In this case, the University is keeping opportunities open to students--only a bus ride along the river--and maintaining its principles...
Benjamin Heller '94 suggests in his letter to the editor (March 23, 1999) that it's an open question whether students would benefit more from the the presence of resident tutors or from the space tutors occupy. As I teach the students in my economics sophomore tutorial, if it is an open question, we should do a little cost-benefit analysis...
...main glass door leading to the Lowell courtyard will now be open to all undergraduates 24 hours a day. In addition, all students will have access to Lowell entryway doors from...
...principals say they need to increase production to compete with other studios, which typically release 15 to 20 films a year. They can either make more deals with outside producers or, more likely, hire a high-powered executive to run the live-action division alongside Spielberg's operation. An open question is how involved Katzenberg--who spent 10 years as head of the Disney studio but fared poorly in live action--will be in building the slate. Until now, the area had primarily been Spielberg's domain, while Katzenberg focused on animation and television...