Course Question

<p>Ooh! Cool! Thanks Phoenixy. I <3 history :)</p>

<p>About double majoring, when I took a tour there I was told by the tour guide about a person who did a joint concentration in physics and theater, two completely separate fields. He said that the person's thesis connecting the two concentrations was an original play called "Le Phys", about physics. If this is true, that's pretty funny.</p>

<p>It is true, except that he was a Physics/Music concentrator, not a Physics/Theater concentrator (there is no theater concentration at Harvard), and "Les Phys" is a musical. My house master is actually in the musical (as a role, not as an actor) and hosts the libretto online. You can read it here:
<a href="http://schwinger.harvard.edu/%7Egeorgi/LesPhys.PDF%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://schwinger.harvard.edu/~georgi/LesPhys.PDF&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Hello,</p>

<p>I have been selected for an interview with the admissions director for the LFM program at MIT. Any tips would be greatly appreciated. What kind of questions are usually asked? Thanks in advance. </p>

<p>Saurabh</p>

<p>I don't think you're asking that in the right place. This is a thread about concentrations at Harvard, not interviews at MIT...</p>

<p>LES PHYS is soo funny</p>

<p>do they perform it on campus still? i want to see it!</p>

<p>Rumor has it that minors will be allowed soon along with the other core reforms.</p>

<p>They are hoping that with the introduction of minors less people will concentrate in economics and government.</p>

<p>Sakky, how many applicants do you think receive invitations for interviews? What advice can you give to prepare for LFM's interview?</p>

<p>Thanks for any help...</p>