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NEWT GINGRICH The ex-Speaker's second novel in a series, Grant Comes East, fictionalizes the Civil War. Unlike the man, the books have bipartisan appeal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hemingways Inside The Beltway | 12/17/2004 | See Source »

...existing collaboration with Simmons, funded by a $100,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Harvard and Simmons librarians have worked mostly with librarians from Iraqi universities...

Author: By Natalie I. Sherman, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Harvard To Help Stock Iraqi Library Collections | 12/16/2004 | See Source »

...doesn’t love historic bathhouses and weather folklore?) But what Peterson and his fellow champions of pet projects presumably won’t be including in their glossy re-election campaign brochures is that Congress also approved an adjustment to the chronically under-funded Pell Grant program, the principal means by which American students receive need-based government grants to attend college. Eligibility for the awards is determined in part by an examination of state tax information, but lawmakers chose to use tax tables that were out of date, clearing the way for some 84,000 students with...

Author: By Matt Loy, | Title: Passing on the Pork | 12/16/2004 | See Source »

...this might seem to have little consequence for Harvard students. A November 2003 article in The Crimson reported that a scant 9 percent of Harvard undergraduates receive Pell Grants in the first place. And if any of those students were to lose their federal money under the new calculations, Harvard would continue to grant the student that amount under the College’s commitment to meet 100 percent of a student’s demonstrated financial need...

Author: By Matt Loy, | Title: Passing on the Pork | 12/16/2004 | See Source »

Next year, government finance for post-secondary education will come under the legislative microscope again when Congress debates the reauthorization of the Higher Education Act, the federal law that provides the architecture for the Pell Grant program. Harvard should set its lobbyists on Capital Hill to work. They should not only preserve the money to which low-income undergraduates here have the right, but also articulate the broader social agenda that the government should not be shirking its duty to provide equal opportunity economically disadvantaged students at all levels and institutions of post-secondary education...

Author: By Matt Loy, | Title: Passing on the Pork | 12/16/2004 | See Source »

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