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...common as naming your class year. I hear and use ‘ze’ and its possessive companion ‘hir’ multiple times a day.” Learning the dynamics of “ze” is also a part of First-Year Orientation. Harvard students probably won’t hear “ze” on FOP, but they might encounter it later. “People that are either queer or educated on this topic use it pretty widely,” said Noa Grayevsky...

Author: By B. BRITT Caputo, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Gender Neutrality Hits Wesleyan | 11/2/2005 | See Source »

...labor in the 21st century. “I really liked the idea she presented of the idea of seeing someone in power that looks like you, that you can relate to, that can help you envision yourself in a similar role,” said Hedieh Rahmanou, a first-year student at the Kennedy School after the event. Sarah Blumenthal, another audience member, also praised Stabenow’s message, saying, “We must continue to fight...just because our mothers set precedents...we can’t sit back and assume just because our faces...

Author: By Paul G. Nauert, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Senator Lauds Female Politicians | 10/31/2005 | See Source »

...Raymond, who taught at Harvard in various capacities for 55 years, died on Sept. 29. He was 88 years old. Raymond was a professor at HBS, Harvard College, and the Extension School, starting at HBS in 1950. There, he put his expertise in business communications to use in a compulsory course that gained notoriety amongst HBS graduates, “Written Analysis of Cases,” or “WAC,” as it was known for short. The course required first-year MBA students to submit biweekly papers, to be dropped off in a slot...

Author: By Alexandra C. Bell, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: IN MEMORIAM: Thomas J. C. Raymond | 10/28/2005 | See Source »

...don’t have these excuses. Many of the future I-bankers assure us that they will head to public interest work after a couple years instead of to Bentleys and the B-school, and maybe they’ll have better luck than the overwhelming majority of first-year law students who say they want to fight for justice and work for anything but a corporate firm. (Close to 80 percent at many of the top schools end up doing just the opposite.) But no matter what the case, we must all confront to what extent...

Author: By Henry Seton, | Title: Too Close to Comfort | 10/26/2005 | See Source »

...Foundation Minority Portraiture Project. His portrait hangs in the Fogg.Evans was honored both for his admissions work and for his activism on behalf of minority groups on and off campus.Evans has also branched out into the University community by working as a proctor in Harvard Yard, an advisor to first-year students, and an assistant dean of freshman.“He works 16 hours a day, but at the same time, feels responsibility to make sure that students from wider backgrounds gain the same chances as others,” Fitzsimmons says. “He also feels...

Author: By Matthew S. Blumenthal, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: From Sharecroppers’ Son To College’s Gatekeeper | 10/17/2005 | See Source »

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