Word: kaneã
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...Kane??s unassuming office serves as an indispensable gear in Harvard’s undergraduate machine, managing course enrollment, grades, academic archives, course catalogs, handbooks and billing. So when the machinery breaks down, students take notice...
...Barry S. Kane??who comes from the corresponding position in New Haven to replace Harvard’s outgoing FAS Registrar Arlene Becella—said yesterday that his tenure as registrar could see important changes in student services such as the course selection process. Most of these ideas—especially an anticipated move to online registration in place of the current pencil-and-paper system—will have to wait for all student records to be converted to a new database, he said...
...Kane??who will oversee four of Harvard’s most critical registration and study card days in September before his permanent arrival here from Yale on Oct. 1—has faced similar issues in his seven years in New Haven. His tenure there has integrated the graduate and undergraduate registrars’ offices, converting student records to a new database system and preparing to move many student services to the web. Yale is also planning for a curricular review, but Kane said it would be relatively minor compared to the comprehensive overhaul headed by Gross...
...Films of the ’50s” series, High Noon (1952) is a classic Western justice film directed by Fred Zinnemann. Marshall Will Kane (Gary Cooper) is ready to retire and leave town to spend the rest of his life with his wife Amy (Grace Kelly). But Kane??s intentions are delayed when he receives news that a deadly outlaw he sent to prison is due to arrive on the noon train. Everyone knows the outlaw has come to seek revenge on the sheriff, but all are too frightened to help him fight. Although John Wayne...
...response to Erin M. Kane??s recent op-ed on interhouse restrictions, I wonder if the Quincy House resident has ever tried living in one of these interhouse restricted houses and learned first-hand what it’s like to find it impossible to get a seat in one’s own dining hall ( Op-ed, “Segregated Dining,” April...