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NL888 Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Does "congressional page" mean "a servant in the Congress"?

Context:

Group, which made money writing computer code for companies in the Pacific Northwest. As a senior, he applied only to three colleges — Harvard, Yale, and Princeton — and he took different approaches to each. “I was born to apply for college,” he said, fully aware of his ability to ace meritocratic processes. For Yale he cast himself as an aspiring political type and emphasized the month he had spent in Washington as a congressional page. For Princeton, he focused only on his desire to be a computer engineer. And for Harvard, he said his passion was math. He had also considered MIT, but at the last moment blew off the interview to play pinball. He was accepted to all three, and chose Harvard. “There are going to be some guys at Harvard who are smarter than you,” Allen warned him. Gates replied, “ ‘No way! No way!’ ”

MOre:
http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2013/09/dawn-of-a-revolution/?t=1379719421060
  

Top answer

They are young people who clerk, run errands, and provide other services for members of congress. " It's intended to be a learning program. org/wiki/United_States_House_of_Representatives_Page

  • They are young people who clerk, run errands, and provide other services for members of congress.
  • " It's intended to be a learning program.
  • org/wiki/United_States_House_of_Representatives_Page
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1 Answers
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They are young people who clerk, run errands, and provide other services for members of congress. They are not "servants." It's intended to be a learning program.

Read more here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_House_of_Representatives_Page

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