Word: attendent
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Harvard could require students to attend a series of lectures where professors present the basic elements of their fields. After each mandatory lecture, students would be required to summarize the information that had just been presented. There would be no out-of-class assignments. With one lecture a week for four years, Harvard could easily provide its students with the knowledge which the Core Curriculum allows them to avoid...
...forseeable future. Harvard gives us no credit towards graduation for ROTC classes. ROTC is counted as an extracurricular activity, so we should be allowed to participate in it as in any other activity. Also many members of ROTC receive a scholarship, without which they might not be able to attend college. In essence, some who claim to believe in openness and free thought want to enforce their narrow and intolerant opinions by banning Harvard students from the ROTC program...
Bennett last year foreshadowed his recent attack on Harvard when he charged that "some people are getting ripped off" in their college education. He urged parents to visit a college for several days and attend a dozen classes before sending their child to that school--something he didn't even bother to do before writing a speech of potentially national significance. Bennett has obviously decided that Harvard should be a principal target: this summer he cited Harvard's drug policy as an example of liberal leniency, and he has stated that he would rather give his son money to start...
Wylie is not the first skater to both compete regularly and attend classes at Harvard. While living along the river, Dick T. Button '52, somewhat of a legend in men's figure skating, held five major figure skating titles in 1949 simultaneously--including medals at the Olympics, World, National, North American and European competitions. Radcliffe captured its own share of skating glory when Tenley Albright '57 captured her fifth consecutive National Ladies' Title and second Olympic Gold Medal in 1956. Both of these Olympians naturally spent much of their time shuttling between the Yard and the historic Boston Skating Club...
Students wishing to attend the Harvard-Dartmouth football game can obtain tickets by bringing their athletic coupon book and six dollars to the ticket office in the basement of Harvard Hall today or tomorrow. In exchange for the money and the Dartmouth football coupon, students will receive one seat to Saturday's contest in Hanover...