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...says that a woman can be president of Harvard.” Harvard’s president wasn’t the only academic recognized by the magazine. Honored alongside Faust were the three other female Ivy League presidents, Amy Gutmann ’71 of the University of Pennsylvania, Ruth J. Simmons of Brown, and Shirley M. Tilghman of Princeton. “There’s a kind of evolving friendship and professional relationship that I value very much,” Faust said of sharing the award with her fellow Ivy presidents. This year?...
Five Harvard students wearing masks and three hooded non-Harvard affiliates with signs confronted the neoconservative, two-term Pennsylvania senator, interfering with his responses during the question and answer period after the lecture...
...interview before the event, Santorum said yesterday’s speech was similar to talks he gave at campuses in Pennsylvania during the controversial Islamofascism Awareness Week, held the last full week in October...
...with J.D.s and Ph.D.s in literary studies, history, biological and cultural anthropology, and philosophy. Our preceptors have their degrees from the best graduate programs in the country—Harvard, Yale, Princeton, the University of Chicago, the University of Michigan, the University of California-Berkeley, and the University of Pennsylvania, to name just a few. They come to Expos with a compelling combination of outstanding teaching records and disciplinary expertise. Instructors with such unparalleled abilities—and this is where the editorial gets it right—do deserve higher salaries...
...every other Ivy League school besides the University of Pennsylvania, the College dean reports directly to the president or the provost, and issues are resolved without the filtering process that hinders the Harvard bureaucracy. It would make much more sense for the new dean of the College to deal directly with President Drew G. Faust to administer organizational policies, budget priorities, and undergraduate issues...