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...individual campaigns and how we can encourage collaboration between groups. We will learn about the history of activism at Harvard, evaluate strategies for campaign development and work toward the beginnings of a coalition of multi-issue organizers. All student participants will undergo in-depth anti-oppression training, attend workshops on issues presented by student organizations and take time to socialize and get to know each other during an open mic event and closing party...
Dressed up and in character, B4Bs attend Republican fundraisers and applaud Bush’s wealthy donors. At town hall events, they stand beside Republican officials to make sure their interests are given priority over other Republicans. At leftist protests they can be heard loudly advocating, “Four more wars! Tax work, not wealth!” Harvard’s own chapter, which currently enjoys a membership of 40 and continues to grow, has plans for elaborate dinners in campus dining halls and lavish downtown soirees. Regardless of the pursuit, Billionaires for Bush relishes making a scene...
...individual campaigns and how we can encourage collaboration between groups. We will learn about the history of activism at Harvard, evaluate strategies for campaign development and work toward the beginnings of a coalition of multi-issue organizers. All student participants will undergo in-depth anti-oppression training, attend workshops on issues presented by student organizations and take time to socialize and get to know each other during an open mic event and closing party...
Mathews was scheduled to speak yesterday in Religion 1529, “Personal Choice and Global Transformation,” taught by Lecturer on the Study of Religion Brian C.W. Palmer ’86, but could not attend because he was still under arrest...
Opponents of the Court’s ruling cite plaintiff Joshua D. Davey’s decision to attend Harvard Law School instead of becoming a minister as evidence that not all participants in his parochial college’s theology program become ministers. Thus, they argue, state scholarships are not necessarily being applied to the training of ministers. What their arguments fail to take into account is the systematically biased approach religious colleges take to teaching theology. States should only support the study of theology when it acknowledges religious choice and pluralism, or else they risk de facto state...