Word: chaired
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...think, in fact, it would not be helpful to have some kind of formulaic checklist that one would look for,” English department chair James T. Engell said, “because, as I’ve said, every case is unique...
...actress seems to have been instantly time-warped to her Scarface youth) and sometimes 200, with frown lines and liver spots popping up in seconds. "What I didn't anticipate was the horror of wearing all those prosthetics," she says. "The hardest thing is sitting in that chair five hours while they're applied, and knowing you have another 12 hours keeping them on." Wearing all that wrinkly glop on your face is hard enough--but how do you act through it? "There's a certain lack of facial expression," says Pfeiffer, "so you have to go bigger and broader...
Behind a closed door in the basement of Lowell House, two counselors sit in a homey living room. Brightly colored couches, a butterfly chair, and a wooden coffee table fill out the warmly lit space. Here, the women of RESPONSE welcome 25 to 35 students who call and drop in each semester when they need to tell someone their stories.In a corner, an old filing cabinet houses a 24-year history of sexual assault at Harvard. That history is made up of notes on each caller and drop-in’s story, all told anonymously.The student-run RESPONSE began...
...woman to be tenured in the economics department. There have been two more since.“It’s very unfortunate that the percentage of tenured women in top economic departments in general is as low as it is,” says James H. Stock, the chair of Harvard’s economics department.Goldin is also the director of the American Economy program at the National Bureau of Economic Research.She plays down the potential difficulties of being a female academic.“I wouldn’t be here if I faced a lot of difficulty...
...week. “It sort of built to a pinnacle of smelliness and then gradually declined,” Mallick said. Horn said today was the first day she didn’t notice the smell upon entering the dining hall. But Adams House Committee co-chair, Timothy J. Smith ’08, said the smell had one positive effect. “It’s worked as a great deterrent,” said Smith, who is also a Crimson business editor. “Finally we’ve reduced the numbers of people...