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Pierce was a summer school proctor after his sophomore year, but he dropped the one class he was taking and became disinterested and distant...

Author: By Hana R. Alberts, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Finding A Different Classroom | 6/10/2004 | See Source »

...Social Studies degree—but that itch to break out from prescribed paths has stayed with Honeyman. It drove her work in two Harvard student groups that promote diversity, the Interfaith Council and the Race Culture, and Diversity (RCD) Initiative. It also landed her in places as distant as the Czech Republic, Honduras, and Rwanda as she worked to unite divided peoples by fostering greater cross-cultural understanding...

Author: By Jasmine J. Mahmoud, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Madison Native Hopes To Mend World’s Rifts | 6/10/2004 | See Source »

Dean of the Faculty William C. Kirby declined to discuss the proposal in his October letter to the Faculty about Allston “because the possibility of undergraduate housing in Allston is in the rather more distant future,” he wrote in an October e-mail. And Summers said new undergraduate housing would not be constructed in the next decade...

Author: By Stephen M. Marks and Lauren A.E. Schuker, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERSS | Title: Searching for a College in Allston | 6/10/2004 | See Source »

...says she found photography, however, too distant and impersonal a medium. Nair then experimented in making films under the tutelage of the Hooker Professor of Visual Arts Alfred Guzzetti and MIT’s Richard Leacock, who are considered among the founders of Cinema Verite, in their documentary film classes...

Author: By Ella A. Hoffman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Finding Home at the Movies | 6/9/2004 | See Source »

...nations, their collective weight begins to rise. As developing areas like, for example, Southeast Asia and Latin America catch up economically and the inhabitants adopt Western lifestyles, their problems with obesity catch up as well. By contrast, among people who still live in conditions most like those of our distant Stone Age ancestors--such as the Maku or the Yanomami of Brazil--there is virtually no obesity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: America's Obesity Crisis:Evolution: How We Grew So Big | 6/7/2004 | See Source »

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