Word: kellerã
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...Keller??along with classmate Tassopoulos and sophomores Kimmel and Dickson—are part of a young corps that has been forced to step up early...
...talking about stepping away from that job,” said Jones, the director of Harvard’s Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics, and Public Policy. “But I have always hoped against hope that she would simply go on.”Jones said Keller??s buyout offer may have helped speed Greenhouse out of the job.“Would Linda have retired now without a buyout? I don’t know,” he said. “So I think you’d have to say that...
...grew, so did student support for American intervention. Conant saw more success in turning student opinion as Britain and France came under duress. After France’s fall and the tremendous allied losses of the Battle of Britain, sentiment was no longer divided, according to Morton and Phyllis Keller??s book “Making Harvard Modern.” Learned Hand Professor of Law Emeritus Oliver Oldman ’42 remembers that, by his senior year, campus sentiment was unified. “By and large, the isolationist view made no sense...
...Sniderman describes dancing as a “lot of fun,” but it’s hard to say if he agrees with Keller??s assertion that the inexperienced dancers are indistinguishable from their peers in the company...
...meant to be a grand exercise in making life in the Yard meaningful.Instead, according to a 1978 core curriculum report, the original intent of the requirement was to teach students that it is possible to think systematically about issues like justice, personal responsibility, and friendship. In Phyllis Keller??s book “Getting to the Core,” then-University President Derek C. Bok, addressing an audience of professional school faculty in 1976, said that whether or not ethical standards have declined, “most people seem to think that they have, and this belief...