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  • ♪♪ [ Woman Vocalizing ]

  • ♪♪ [ Pop ]

  • But now I’ve seen it through And now I know the truth

  • That anything could happen

  • Anything could happen Anything could

  • ♪♪ [ Vocalizing Continues ]

  • ♪♪ [ Ends ]

  • [ Anthony Narrating ] Every day, when I wake up...

  • I still can’t believe I’m at Harvard.

  • Like every freshman, I get to live in Harvard Yard...

  • and I get to eat breakfast in Annenberg Hall.

  • - What’s up, you guys? - Hey.

  • I really enjoy my freshman seminar, “The Evolution of Aging.”

  • It’s just me, 15 other students and a faculty member.

  • And I get to work directly with my professor on research projects.

  • I’m able to visit any of the other great Harvard schools...

  • like the School of Engineering...

  • or the Kennedy School, where I’ve heard world leaders speak...

  • or the medical school, which is pretty cool...

  • because I’m also training to become an E.M.T.– I want to become a doctor.

  • Every day, I get to hang out with my friends and try something new.

  • [ All Shout ]

  • Harvard is one university with a million things to explore...

  • and I’m glad I’ve got the next three years to try them all.

  • My name is Anthony, and I’m from Tucker, Georgia.

  • The house system is here to make whatever you want to do at Harvard possible.

  • There are 12 residential Harvard houses.

  • [ Female Student ] Each house has its own dining hall, its own community...

  • its own population of students.

  • After freshman year, you are randomly sorted into one of those houses.

  • Not only is the house a center for non-classroom learning...

  • but it’s also a hub for social activity.

  • [ Female Student #2 ] You all live together and eat together...

  • and participate in events together.

  • [ Female Student #3 ] There are people from every country...

  • every religion, and that’s where you really learn.

  • A lot of the opportunities that you have...

  • to have those close one-on-one conversations...

  • with a professor, with someone who’s visiting from another university

  • The place where you really get to engage with those people is in your house.

  • [ Man ] Our job’s really to try and help this house...

  • be as vibrant and intellectual and fun as possible.

  • [ Lowell Housemaster ] Lowell House is a place that has a lot of traditions...

  • like having tea on Thursdays at 5:00.

  • - [ Female Student #4 ] There’s an opera every year. - [ Male Student ] Dances in the house.

  • It’s a good time to get to know other people in the house...

  • to see your friends, catch up on the week.

  • It’s a place where you can be who you are and discover who you want to become.

  • I think coming back home is a very comfortable space.

  • [ Lowell Housemaster ] This is really an attempt to create a community within a college.

  • This is what makes a Harvard education very distinctive.

  • [ Jeremy Narrating ] I was born the middle child of Asian immigrants.

  • I’ve always loved playing the drums.

  • I was an editor of my high school newspaper.

  • And I got a summer internship working for a senator.

  • Academics have always been important to me.

  • I graduated from Harvard with a major in economics...

  • and a minor in sociology.

  • Harvard’s an amazing place that let me explore everything...

  • and the place where I learned I could become anything:

  • an economist, a politician...

  • or even a professional basketball player.

  • My name is Jeremy, and I’m class of 2010.

  • ♪♪ [ Rock ]

  • [ Man ] ♪ Whoo-hoo

  • ♪♪ [ Continues ]

  • Whoo-hoo

  • ♪♪ [ Continues ]

  • ♪♪ [ Singing, Indistinct ]

  • ♪♪ [ Ends ]

  • My name is Lucerito Ortiz. I’m from North Hills, California.

  • My parents are two of the hardest-working people.

  • My dad works in gardening.

  • My mom found work as a housekeeper.

  • We have a big family.

  • We have to find ways to save as much as we can.

  • I learned to sew.

  • We have chickens, so that way we don’t have to buy eggs.

  • Theyre very, very delicious. Much better than store-bought eggs.

  • And we cook at home. It’s different ways to save money.

  • Theyll sacrifice anything and everything for their children...

  • and theyve worked incredibly hard to get us to where we are.

  • My daughter is a very, very responsible person...

  • and she loved school.

  • But I ended up applying sort of as a joke, as a dare.

  • A couple of friends and I were out on the track one day, just chatting.

  • We just saidWe were laughing

  • It would be so funny if you applied to Harvard.

  • We could frame your rejection letter.”

  • One day, Lucerito called me...

  • and she said, “Mom, guess what.”

  • The letter was there. I was on the phone with my mom.

  • I said, “Mom, hold on.”

  • And then she said, “Mom, I was accepted at Harvard.”

  • I ran all over my house, just yelling and screaming...

  • and told my whole family...

  • and we were all just in utter shock.

  • My husband and I talked about, “We don’t have the money.”

  • I found out that for a family like ours...

  • we wouldn’t have to worry about affording Harvard.

  • Harvard has such an amazing financial aid program...

  • that for us, in reality, it was much more affordable...

  • than attending any of the state schools.

  • I really, really admire her, and I’m so proud of her.

  • For me, Harvard wasn’t just for me...

  • it was for my whole family...

  • and I think my whole family has benefited immensely...

  • from our experience at Harvard.

  • It’s an incredible feeling...

  • to feel like I was finally able to give something back to my family...

  • after everything they sacrificed for me.

  • One of the most important aspects of teaching the humanities...

  • is to transmit cultural values across time.

  • We pursue the study with the conviction that were training global citizens.

  • Expanding your horizons and learning how to ask new questions...

  • and learning how to have your questions answered.

  • This is a place that has art museums that are unique...

  • in their depth and their breadth.

  • The humanities shift and change as the great public issues...

  • and public questions of our times change.

  • By the time you graduate and youve picked a concentration or a major...

  • youre really poised to do many and often unpredictable things.

  • Harvard is, in the best sense, a global university.

  • [ Emerance Narrating ] You can look just about anywhere from my house...

  • and you would see strictly land, and that’s about it.

  • I live in Alberta, Canada.

  • My great-great-grandparents came over here over a century ago...

  • and started a farm, and my dad still farms the same farm today.

  • In Canada, there’s only two seasons. One season is farming season.

  • The other is hockey season.

  • I have a brother, Bronson. My sister is Brittaney.

  • I have a brother, Brock, and a younger brother, Kache.

  • We all play hockey.

  • Since I was little, there was just one team. I played with the guys.

  • After that, I continued playing guyshockey.

  • I wanted to challenge myself all the time...

  • and prove to everyone that I could be just as good as the guys.

  • When I was 13 years old, the team that I was playing on...

  • went to Boston for a tournament.

  • My mom and I went together, and we toured Harvard.

  • I fell in love with it right away.

  • I told my mom, “I’m gonna go here one day.”

  • My mom and dad taught us kids to work really hard...

  • and always challenge ourselves.

  • They told us to have a good work ethic, and no matter what...

  • no matter how hard it was, to stick with it and youll get through it...

  • and eventually, youll have success.

  • My name is Emerance Maschmeyer...

  • and I play goalie for the Harvard women’s ice hockey team.

  • [ Nicholas Narrating ] I’m a journalist and Harvard class of 1982.

  • I’ve lived all over:

  • Egypt and Oxford.

  • China and Congo.

  • And in my travels, I’ve discovered that Harvard isn’t just a place...

  • it’s a community.

  • I found support through Harvard bonds.

  • There are more than 350,000 alumni scattered all over the world.

  • Were waiting for you to join us.

  • My name is Nicholas Kristof.

  • When you consider Harvard, make sure to consider...

  • what comes after.

  • [ Male Student Narrating ] My professor is the president...

  • of the Society for the Study of Evolution...

  • and the American Genetic Association.

  • He’s respected for employing genetic tools for the study of evolutionary biology.

  • He believes that close social bonds help the group to work better together in the lab.

  • We work side-by-side to analyze the data from my field research in Australia...

  • and to study the evolution of a pathogen.

  • Were doing the kind of science that the world expects from Harvard.

  • I just never expected to do it over breakfast.

  • The first line of my application here...

  • said, “For as long as I can remember, I’ve wanted to be an actor.”

  • It was asking kind of who you were, and that was really who I was...

  • and I wanted them to know who I was...

  • and, whether they accepted me or not...

  • I wanted them to know who they were gonna let in or not.

  • Having grown up here, I think I had one way of looking at Harvard

  • kind of a townie view of the school.

  • Suddenly walking through as a prospective student...

  • I just started to really take in how impressive it was.

  • I assumed if I could get into an Ivy League school

  • That kind of touched every base for me.

  • And then I got into Harvard, and it’s a very tough place to turn down.

  • This great teacher named Anthony Kubiak– I took a number of his classes.

  • This was the final one that I took. It was the playwriting class.

  • I handed in the first act of a three-act movie

  • what eventually became Good Will Hunting.

  • I apologized to him when I handed him this 40-some-odd page document.

  • I just said, “I don’t think I did what you wanted.

  • I was supposed to write a one-act play...

  • and this is clearly the first act of a three-act movie.”

  • He was unbelievably encouraging.

  • He gave me a flat “A” in the class, which was a big deal.

  • He wrote extensively in the margins

  • or on a cover page that he put on it

  • toplease keep up with this”–

  • that it was worthy, that it was good...

  • that it wasn’t anything close to a failure...

  • that it was something I had to pursue.

  • So I showed it to Ben Affleck, and the rest is history.

  • [ Crowd Cheering ]

  • [ Chattering ]

  • [ Crowd Cheering ]

  • [ Joanne Narrating ] I didn’t plan to end up in the food business.

  • I started, right after graduation, working for a consulting firm.

  • I left the consulting firm and got a job at a restaurant...

  • and then I fell in love with it.

  • So I came back to Boston and opened a bakery.

  • Now I own four bakeries and a restaurant.

  • When I got to Harvard as a freshman

  • I’d always been kind of a math geek in high school...

  • so, to me, it seemed natural to kind of fall into math.

  • I realized there were so many other things that I didn’t even know existed...

  • that I could possibly be interested in.

  • I think Harvard spends a lot of time trying to make sure that all of its offerings...

  • are really enticing and well put together.

  • When I first started, there was a whole world that kind of opened up.

  • It’s like going to a buffet where there’s all the best desserts in the world.

  • You just don’t know where to start.

  • Would imagine everybody who goes just takes a moment...

  • says, “Wow. I thought I was gonna be ‘X’...

  • but now I could potentially be ‘Y’ or ‘Z’”...

  • which is the fun part.

  • My name is Joanne Chang. I graduated in ’91, and I lived in Leverett House.

  • My name is Evgenija Stojcevska.

  • I’m from Skopje, Macedonia.

  • My name is August, and I was born in Vietnam.

  • My name is Audrey, and my home is Oakland, California.

  • I’m from Thessaloníki , Greece.

  • My name is Gaby Ruiz-Colón, and I’m from Aguadilla, Puerto Rico.

  • My name is Haley Adams, and I’m from Bureau County, Illinois.

  • My name is Herman Bhupal, and I’m from Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

  • I’m Josh McTaggart. I’m from England.

  • [ Man Narrating ] Students from all 50 of the United States and over 100 countries.

  • I’m just a California girl.

  • My name is Majahonkhe Shabangu.

  • All living, learning and growing together in the one place they all call home.

  • I’m from Sweden, but I’m at home at Harvard.

  • I’m at home at Harvard.

  • I am from the Kingdom of Swaziland, but Harvard is my home.

  • ♪♪ [ Pop ]

  • But now I’ve seen it through And now I know the truth

  • That anything could happen

  • Anything could happen Anything could

  • ♪♪ [ Vocalizing ]

  • ♪♪ [ Ends ]

♪♪ [ Woman Vocalizing ]

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