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Carlivati said she moderately supports the war because she believes there’s nothing left to do??Bush has “painted [Americans] into a corner,” she says...

Author: By Nalina Sombuntham, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Crimson Poll: Majority Against Military Action | 3/21/2003 | See Source »

Part of the blame falls with Harvard’s anti-discrimination policy; it is unclear what a club must do??if anything—in order to demonstrate its openness. When organizations are blatantly discriminatory, the University has committed itself to correcting the problem. In 1984, it revoked the charters of all the Final Clubs; as recently as the fall, the University rebuffed the Harvard-Radcliffe Christian Fellowship for a discriminatory clause in its constitution, which required all club officers to take an oath upholding several tenets of Christianity...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, | Title: Exclusive By Nature | 3/17/2003 | See Source »

Coles says the editors are “brought together by a shared sense of what we’re trying to do?? Observation, and then rendering the observed for others through words and pictures… There’s the creative side, the narrative side, presentation—but the publishing side has to be a division of labor.” This refusal to compromise the editorial mission for commercial concerns is understandable; but a complete divorce of the two efforts necessary to fulfill that mission has not helped the magazine’s cause...

Author: By Dan L. Wagner, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Seeing Double | 3/14/2003 | See Source »

...interact with and befriend the “best and brightest” students in the country. The anecdotes that the “Things We Thought We’d Never Do?? panelists shared with junior parents help explain why schools with high revealed preferences rankings—like Harvard, Yale and Princeton—are worth paying for. Parents were rightfully impressed by the panelists’ significant accomplishments, and as one panelist, Whitney E. Harrington ’04, explained, the Harvard junior class has more than 1600 stories of achievement. When so many great...

Author: By Judd B. Kessler, | Title: Tuition Worth Paying | 3/4/2003 | See Source »

...most cases, the success of Harvard’s students relies on their peers—present, past and future. We are challenged and helped by the students who attend Harvard while we do??in classes, study groups and extracurricular organizations. Graduates of Harvard are a built-in support network for post-graduate work in whatever careers students choose. And if the Harvard name has some “signaling” sway with non-alumnus employers, it’s only because the students who come out of Harvard consistently do great things—lead businesses...

Author: By Judd B. Kessler, | Title: Tuition Worth Paying | 3/4/2003 | See Source »

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