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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...felt that we were empowering the students that are going to be the future leaders of Latin America, with the correct way to approach problem-solving,” she said...

Author: By Emily M. Osgood, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Students Take Spring Break To Run Event in Guatemala | 3/19/2003 | See Source »

...England also lacks the Harvard-style cultrual sensitivities. This is for the most part a good thing for our own Harvard, but I must admit that it is rather liberating to be in an environment where I don’t constantly feel the need to flash my politically correct credentials before engaging in a controversial political discussion—usually on racial profiling or affirmative action—or telling an off-color joke.  While I certainly prefer our version of higher learning, Cambridge refreshingly lacks the sense of fatalism that abounds among many Harvard students...

Author: By Alexander S. Grodd, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Nuggets of Wisdom | 3/13/2003 | See Source »

...Jewish tradition has long allowed for prayers and acts thought to produce the correct conditions for conceiving a male, he said...

Author: By Kate A. Tiskus, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Sandel Speaks on Bioethics | 3/11/2003 | See Source »

...gravest reservations held by opponents of a new war on Iraq is what would happen afterward. Even if the Bush Administration proves correct in assuming a quick military success, the postwar peace, by all accounts, would be a messy affair. Yet some who support the war believe destroying Saddam Hussein's regime would bring sweeping benefits to the entire Middle East. Though it has leaked a satchel of scenarios for beating Saddam's army, the Administration has said barely a word about managing the perilous aftermath. So there was President George W. Bush last week, posed before a panoply...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Looking Beyond Saddam | 3/10/2003 | See Source »

...what he's been saying," says Barry Diller, CEO of USA Interactive and a fellow director with Buffett on the boards of both Coke and Washington Post. As in his investing, Buffett sticks to his principles even during periods when they're unpopular, and expects to be proved correct in the long run. Then others follow...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Comeback Crusader | 3/10/2003 | See Source »

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