Word: korn
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...integrated, then why aren't there any white kids here?" That's what seven-year-old Jahseem Maxwell wanted to know, when his second-grade teacher, Lindsay Korn read to the class from Toni Morrison's Remember (which includes a brief history of integration). Despite the historic U.S. election occurring on the same day he asked his question, the world outside his classroom at the Future Leaders Institute just off Harlem's Malcolm X Boulevard didn't seem much different from the 1950s reality described by Morrison...
...should come as no surprise, then, that the 24 children in Korn's class had never seen a lacrosse stick before she introduced one. The predominantly white sport popular at Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic universities requires two things New York City public schools don't have: money and fields. But given the election, it was, after all, a week of firsts. "All of our students were excited about the election," said Anderson. "For us educators, Obama's victory means that when we tell these students that they can do anything, it's not hyperbole." And so, on an unseasonably warm...
...played in one; Anderson believes in giving students a lacrosse stick and the chance to play their way to a better education. "Ideally, I want to see about 60 percent of the kids who started with us at go on to boarding schools or private schools," says Anderson. Enter Korn's father, Rick, a former player who helped coach his own son to the Division-I level; Bob Turco, a Harlem-born lacrosse coaching legend who played his way to Washington and Lee University in the '70s; and Ross Turco, Bob's son and former high school All-America...
...David Korn ’54, a former dean of Stanford University School of Medicine who will begin a term as Harvard’s first vice provost for research next week, will be leading the University-wide review of industry-related practices and policy that was scheduled for this fall...
...reach developing communities,” Navarro said. The judging panel appeared to be pleased with the overall quality of the pitches. “This competition was a great opportunity to test drive ideas in front of a live audience,” said Jeffrey A. Korn ’86, one of the three judges. “I thought that the winning pitch was deserving, although there were other great pitches, as well.” The competition is named after an “elevator pitch” because competitors are required to present their ideas...