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Those students eligible to participate in the Recruiting Program are seniors and alumni of Harvard College, full-time graduate students and alumni of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. On occasion companies come on campus to recruit underclassmen for summer jobs and internship programs. These positions are listed separately in the Newsletter and follow the same procedures as fall recruiting listed below...

Author: By Judy Murray, OFFICE OF CAREER SERVICES | Title: Making the Most of Recruiting | 10/9/1992 | See Source »

...that Washington isn't a good place to visit or to do an internship. The Institute of Politics would never lie to you, would it? How could D.C. remain the Gov jock Mecca for every University in the country if it didn't deliver? As thousands of Harvard students will tell you, a job there can be awesome. For one thing, the entire city is run by people under age 30, so professionals who actually have important things to do can be duped into taking you seriously--even though your job is only picking up your boss's dry cleaning...

Author: By Thomas S. Hixson, | Title: What I Did Over Summer Vacation | 9/16/1992 | See Source »

They all went to the highest bidder last night (for $310, $1000 and $90, respectively) at the third annual auction to benefit the Kennedy School of Government's Summer Internship Fund...

Author: By Michael E. Balagur, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: K-School Auction Nets $8520 for Internships | 2/14/1992 | See Source »

...When things get really bad, that's when you need to drown your sorrows in a 49 cent burger and read a Shoebox Greeting from somebody who loves you--like your Mom, perhaps, who won't bug you about not being able to find a job or a summer internship...

Author: By Beth L. Pinsker, | Title: Shopping Blues | 2/1/1992 | See Source »

...these financial constraints lead the person to opt for the paid internship does this mean that he or she is working in public service for "strictly financial reasons?" Does this change if we learn that the person would have preferred the unpaid internship? Of course not. It simply shows how real constraints can influence a decision between two equally legitimate, substantial options...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: More Than One Interpretation of ROTC Survey | 1/8/1992 | See Source »

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