Word: dominguez
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...Council of Graduate Schools, a national organization dedicated to the advancement of graduate education and research. A spokesman for the council, Stuart Heiser, attributed the increase in part to efforts by the federal government to improve processing of student visas. Vice Provost for International Affairs Jorge I. Dominguez said that post-Sept. 11 visa rules were “pretty draconian.” He praised the International Office for learning how to effectively deal with the new regulations. “There was a period of time after 9/11 when the office was strained very heavily...
...only does China have the world’s fastest growing economy, it has, by far, the fastest expanding system of higher education,” he added. Harvard has long recognized China’s importance as a country, Vice Provost for International Affairs Jorge I. Dominguez wrote in an e-mail yesterday. “Among the founding courses of the post-World War II ‘new’ general education curriculum were the two semesters on East Asian history and civilization.” The proliferation of students from China, particularly at the graduate...
...this number. The singers, who only occasionally had difficulty with intonation under the musical direction of Rachel M. Williams ’07, were unified and excited.Ben M. Cuddon a GSAS first-year student in Middle Eastern studies, Nelson T. Greaves ’10, and Kristina A. Dominguez ’10 also get big laughs.But sometimes caricature backfires. Emerson senior Sara Collins’ Val, the clear-eyed, self-indulgent cynic, sings “Dance: Ten, Looks: Three,” an ode to career advancement via plastic surgery. The more honest title for the song would...
...Music and the Mirror.” Bottom: From right to left, Samantha G. M. Barnard ’09, Sara Collins and Anna Haas, both seniors at Emerson College, Julia A. Rudolf ’10, Katie W. Johnson ’07, and Kristina A. Dominguez ’10 perform “One.” Harvard’s first production of “A Chorus Line” will run from Oct. 27-Nov. 4 at the Aggasiz Theatre...
...from a university that has applied for and received an academic exchange license from the U.S. Treasury Department. The arduous process of obtaining this license took 18 months, and permission lasts for only one year, according to Harvard’s vice provost for international affairs, Jorge I. Dominguez. The Cuban-born Dominguez wrote in an e-mail to the Crimson, “We will apply again for a license [next year] but have no certainty whether we will get it or by what time.” Even now that Harvard has a license, Cuba-bound undergraduates must...