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...recent report on the Harvard College Curricular Review reaffirms our commitment to a liberal education in the arts and sciences and outlines a curriculum in which students have greater freedom to shape their educations. While many of the recommendations represent new formats, opportunities and commitments, they bring together and recast many of the changes that were already being developed in the concentrations and in FAS at large: commitment to international education, growing emphasis on the sciences, opportunities for interdisciplinary work and more venues for students to work closely with faculty in small groups...

Author: By Benedict H. Gross and Jeffrey Wolcowitz, S | Title: Curricular Review, Large and Small | 6/10/2004 | See Source »

...Faculty of Arts and Sciences unanimously approves reducing the number of Core requirements by one, from eight to seven, to give students more freedom to take electives, including freshman seminars...

Author: By Zachary Z Norman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Looking Back Through The Years: The Class of 2004's Time at Harvard | 6/10/2004 | See Source »

...It’s really very important that the next president and the next administration have a sense of total…flexibility and freedom without the sense that there’s somebody hanging around and thinking about what they’re doing,” he says. “I didn’t read the curricular review report, not because I don’t care about the curriculum, but because it’s someone else’s curriculum...

Author: By Catherine E. Shoichet, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Whatever Happened to Neil L. Rudenstine? | 6/10/2004 | See Source »

Nair continued making these kind of cinema verite documentary films for seven years after she graduated, but she eventually yearned for the freedom of fiction...

Author: By Ella A. Hoffman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Finding Home at the Movies | 6/9/2004 | See Source »

...recall economics to its roots in moral and political philosophy,” Bass Professor of Government Michael Sandel writes in an e-mail. “He reminds us that economics can be a humane science, concerned not only with utility but also with human development, democracy and freedom...

Author: By Nathan J. Heller, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Sen Sets Sights On World Poverty | 6/9/2004 | See Source »

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