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Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) spokesman Steven G. Catalano wrote in an e-mail that the bill could have a detrimental effect on campus safety. [CORRECTION BELOW...
...remember the day you got your acceptance letter from Harvard by e-mail, proudly declaring you an official member of the newest incoming class. Not only were you suddenly a college student after four long years in secondary-school purgatory: You were a Harvard student! For that brief moment, the modesty that you exuded as you waited nervously for that letter to arrive flew out the window, along with the inferior acceptance letters of Princeton and Yale. For a split second, you felt like...
...Current Economic Slowdown: Causes and Consequences”—was hosted by the Harvard economics department and intended to explore the recent downturn with “no Harvard politics, just real-world substance,” department chair and moderator James H. Stock wrote in an e-mail. The panel featured Rogoff, an economics professor and former research economist for the International Monetary Fund, and John Y. Campbell, an economics professor and expert on capital markets. The panelists expressed pessimistic views about the economy’s current situation, as well as worries about the future...
...history of the body, “The idea is to think in a suggestive rather than exhaustive manner about the way that historians and social theorists have thought about the history of the body,” Johnson said. History department chair James T. Kloppenberg said in an e-mail that Johnson will be breaking boundaries and asking new questions in this class. “Walter is a very talented and imaginative historian,” Kloppenberg said. “His new course reflects the expanding interests of historians into fields that earlier generations tended...
...North's isolation eases, Turkish Cypriot leaders concede that their territory has fallen into ill repute. "Mistakes were made," Turkish Cypriot Prime Minister Ferdi Soyer told TIME by e-mail. "We are determined to clean up our country and remove all these people who have done bad things." A settlement, if it materializes, would probably lead to tougher regulations and extradition treaties. Dervis Deniz, a former Economy Minister of the North, says it's high time: "The longer we stay isolated, the longer we attract the cowboys and gangsters...