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...Arts and Sciences Associate Dean for Human Resources Geoffrey Peters said that Harvard has yet to decide if the workers will keep their jobs in the long term. “Regarding claims of ethnic discrimination, we take such accusations very seriously,” he wrote in an e-mail. “We have asked the Harvard University Office of Labor Relations to investigate these claims and they are in the process of doing so as quickly and judiciously as possible.” The procession paused at multiple points for protestors to take turns at the megaphone...
...recalls, he held a conversation with two Persian native speakers who told him his abilities were ‘amazing.’ Not bad for starting the language his freshman year. Languages aren’t all he does. He also, for example, has quite a unique e-mail signature – “LT3.” “It started right before Terminator 3 came out, and everyone was like ‘T3! T3!,’” he said. “But it’s funny because...
...Harvard Salient all count her as an active member. Grizzle might be best known for spearheading HRL’s highly controversial Elena campaign, a series of anti-abortion posters that pictured a developing fetus speaking as a young girl. The posters came under fire on house e-mail lists and in conversations all over campus. Grizzle believes the controversy points to the success of the campaign: “It did exactly what I hoped which was to get people to talk about the issue. If we make people angry, I think we’re doing something right...
...around campus for having more than 300 Facebook.com groups devoted to him (with such gems as “Nate Dern Loves Primal Scream, Eight of His Toes Do Not” and “Nate Dern: Fop Leader or Reckless Cavalier?”). According to an e-mail from roommate and Crimson photography chair Joseph L. Abel ’07, Dern is unafraid to bare all, once streaking through all 13 Harvard dining halls after a dare in just a hair under an hour. Dern’s fame—on and off campus?...
...other categories.” For example, the Moral Reasoning category can encompass the “normative issues concerning what we do and do not have reason to do and believe,” task force co-chair and Professor of Philosophy Alison Simmons wrote in an e-mail.“The other categories can easily accommodate descriptive issues concerning the social, political and personal roles that religion has played,” Simmons wrote.Only one speaker at the meeting, Plummer Professor of Christian Morals Peter J. Gomes, lamented the requirement’s demise. He said that...