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...know it, but throughout the year, any interaction you have with your friendly neighborhood proctor could end up in an evaluation at the admissions office, informing future admissions decisions. Recently, the admissions office was forced to admit, via a mistakenly sent email, that information collected about current freshman, and possibly upperclassmen, may be used to determine who was an “admissions mistake” and who was a treasured find. The email—accidentally sent by a proctor to a Crimson reporter—condemned two students as “so self-centered that they have...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, | Title: Peeking Proctors | 4/14/2006 | See Source »

...would also have been illuminating. Paglia’s decided opinions about what makes a poem great inform her analysis in “Break, Blow, Burn,” and she devotes a few pages to her poetic philosophy in her introduction. But the greatness of almost all the poems she discusses here is uncontroversial, so her viewpoint does not emerge as clearly as it could...

Author: By Lois E. Beckett, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Paglia Praises Her 43 Favorite Poems | 4/12/2006 | See Source »

...supplemented with the experience that can best be gleaned from hands-on work: seeing first-hand the consequences of eviction storage regulations through HPAG, or a struggling health care system through Project Health, or an underperforming school through a range of tutoring programs offered on this campus, can both inform and motivate in a manner entirely distinct from a policy paper or statistical study...

Author: By Greg M. Schmidt | Title: Eviction Notice | 4/10/2006 | See Source »

...address this problem in two ways. First, we inform guidance counselors about HFAI and how it makes Harvard accessible to any student who is academically qualified with the hope that the counselor will invite a wider array of students to the information session. Second, we offer ourselves as personal resources for students as they go through the application process, as students often do not know how to apply to Harvard or have sub-par guidance through the process...

Author: By Bryce E. Caswell and Precious E. Eboigbe | Title: HFAI: A Low-Income Revolution | 4/7/2006 | See Source »

Harvard’s increased commitment to HFAI is an exciting and groundbreaking transformation in making college more accessible to people of different economic backgrounds. Harvard continues to see an increase in requests for information about this program and the caliber of applicants continues to increase. The next milestone, and one that will take more than just Harvard’s endowment, is to inform students about HFAI and the potential of attending college at the grassroots level. The face of higher education is changing and programs like HFAI will surely help shape its future...

Author: By Bryce E. Caswell and Precious E. Eboigbe | Title: HFAI: A Low-Income Revolution | 4/7/2006 | See Source »

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