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When Lawrence H. Summers stepped down as Harvard’s president last spring, it sent shock waves across the University and around the world. The debate about his resignation and brief presidency was fierce. E-mail open-lists, campus blogs, casual lunchtime conversations, and even this newspaper??s editorials were punctuated by deeply held sentiments toward our departing leader.With a search for Harvard’s next leader ongoing, our interest in Harvard’s presidency should be more intense than ever. The vacancy in Massachusetts Hall presents us with an historic opportunity to choose...
Sure, The Crimson covered the report’s release, and Undergraduate Council (UC) representatives were enlisted to distribute copies in their Houses. But without any follow-up activity, the story disappeared from this newspaper??s pages, and the report has languished in unappealing piles in the Houses of the few representatives who actually picked up their copies...
Veteran journalist and editor Peter W. Kaplan ’76, the editor of The Observer since 1994, has been searching for someone to buy the newspaper from Carter since at least early this year. Carter had reportedly tired of underwriting the newspaper??s consistent...
...sting of gender discrimination.Greenhouse, who grew up in Hamden, Conn., and was editor of her high school newspaper, joined The Crimson in her freshman year of college. She was frequently barred from the surrounding all-male Houses’ dining halls—Adams, the House closest to the newspaper??s offices, only allowed women to enter a few nights each week, as Greenhouse recalled in a 1973 speech.“I often ate dinner alone at a cheap place in the Square when I was working late at The Crimson because I couldn?...
...truth in a situation and trying to influence the most ethical outcome.”He applied his strict sense of ethics to himself. When he had to pay a fine for shooting a dove above a baited field, he insisted that it be written up in his newspaper??though the incident was so minor it would not have normally merited ink.“He felt it should be there. He violated the law,” Post remembers.BREAKING UPBut Bingham’s unwillingness to change his views led to dissent on the leadership...