Word: moreã
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Bhabha has hope. “We could do much more?? with the arts, he said. He added that there could be better support for artistic endeavors at Harvard, more artistic works in syllabi, and increased artistic events in the Houses...
...Dean of the Faculty unilaterally decided that a number of new humanities courses would count for Core credit. That should happen again on a much broader level. To accomplish this, arbitrary technical requirements for Core courses should be relaxed. Courses without midterms are just as valuable—often more??than those with them. The Committee has admitted the senselessness of such administrative hurdles; the Faculty need not await the full implementation of General Education in order to make that adjustment for the existing Core. Furthermore, the committees that decide what counts meet so infrequently that even those...
Harvard is as much—if not more??a culprit as any other institution, its students so dedicated to extracurricular activities and internships that the prospect of departing Harvard for a precious semester is more frightening than thrilling. Close friends of mine asked me quite seriously if going abroad would be worth “missing out on” a semester at Harvard. Several others asked me what harm would be done to my “leadership positions” if I skipped town for seven months. There is genuine fear of studying abroad...
...Mellon University, has found that men are more likely to negotiate their starting salaries, while women are more likely to accept their employer’s first offer. In a study of Carnegie Mellon business school graduates, Babcock found that 57 percent of men “asked for more??—while just 7 percent of women tried to negotiate...
...break of 1956. During the holidays, three other students—Thomas S. Gates III ’56, Myron T. Herrick ’57, and Jedediah H. McLane ’58—were killed in a fire during a ski trip in Canada, and two more??Winthrop P. Smith ’58 and John J. Woodward ’59—were found dead both due to “apparent suicides,” according to a Jan. 5, 1956 Crimson article...