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...with an august Basque accent after all these years. Her hearing is not as good as it used to be, but she still musters enough wit for biting ripostes. Josefina has served rich coffee and even richer company over the 48 years that she owned Café Pamplona, playing host to writers, students, locals and luminaries. (She sold it to a young Canadian couple last week.) The café, “my little coffeehouse in Cambridge,” as she fondly calls it, will not be the same without her behind its counter.America, however, just might...

Author: By Sahil K. Mahtani and Brian J. Rosenberg, S | Title: Company in Cambridge: A Pamplonan’s Coffee-Flavored Life | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

...lined and unlined) that are designed to protect them when working with high temperature machines. The Need for BalanceAs a tax-exempt, non-profit institution, Harvard has a responsibility to manage its financial resources prudently. Our tuition-paying students and their families, our donors and research sponsors, and our host communities expect the University to act responsibly with regard to its finances and commitments.From year to year, the University must balance its budget. Any agreements made with our unionized workers have financial implications for all of our operating units and for all of our employees, since we must take equity...

Author: By Mary ann O’brien, | Title: Get the Facts: Harvard and its Service Employees | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

...says. “She’ll ask tough questions and cut to the core of things. In addition to speaking at Class Day, She will also be awarded the Radcliffe Institute Medal on Radcliffe Day this Friday. Recent Class Day speakers at HLS include CNN talk show host Larry King, White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales, now the U.S. attorney general, and former presidential adviser David Gergen, now a Kennedy School professor.—Staff writer Johannah S. Cornblatt can be reached at jcornbl@fas.harvard.edu...

Author: By Johannah S. Cornblatt, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Life and ‘Times’ of A Court Reporter | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

...rains, for it represents the continuity and the renewal that comes with each new generation. Ah, tradition! For hundreds of years there have been few or no women or minorities on Harvard’s faculties, and the situation is not changing quickly. Since its inception, Harvard has hosted homosexual students, but never officially promised them that the University will be a refuge from discrimination. The heritage of Harvard is its greatest strength, but also one of its mightiest flaws. The past year has shown once more that the University can use the resource of its great past...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, | Title: Our Traditions | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

...with little or no work and have the only permanent trace of one’s presence here a series of impressions on an IBM card. This spirit of live and let live extends through every aspect of undergraduate life. There are no big men on campus, only a host of little big men. The quest for fame reaches an early, flickering peak when 50 freshmen of whom no one but a few old-school friends have ever heard vie for the votes of an apathetic class to make the Union or Jubilee committees. An astonishingly large percentage of each...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, | Title: 20 Below and In the Shade | 6/6/2006 | See Source »

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