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...honors programs. The man who wants expert advice and individual attention to his academic problems can get all he needs if he is willing to work for it. And conversely it is just as easy to be left alone. There is no such thing as school spirit per se. Attendance at the rare football rallies is often so poor that everybody walks home without even attempting to cheer. The so called “All-College Weekend” has been abandoned as a miserable flop. Yet when President Pusey replied to Senator McCarthy’s charges that there...
Americans are less healthy than Canadians and have poorer and less accessible healthcare despite spending about twice as much on it per capita, according to a study published by three Harvard Medical School scientists last week. The authors, HMS instructor Karen E. Lasser and assistant professors Stephanie J. Woolhandler and David U. Himmelstein, concluded that Americans suffer more from chronic illnesses and obesity than Canadians, are less likely to have one regular doctor, and are almost twice as likely to forego medicine they need because they cannot afford it. The authors also found that Canadians saw smaller disparities in healthcare...
While coursepack costs remained exorbitant this past year, Harvard continued to make a college education more accessible to low-income families. In April, the Harvard Financial Aid Initiative (HFAI) was expanded to eliminate the family contribution for students with family incomes under $60,000 per year and dramatically reduced the contribution of families with income under $80,000, a move that pushed Harvard far ahead of its competitors, and will hopefully generate a ripple effect across higher education. But Harvard must not neglect the students (and their) families with annual incomes too large to qualify for Harvard?...
...seeded St. Lawrence in the semifinal and take home the conference championship and an automatic NCAA berth. The pair of high-pressure goals capped a season in which Raimondi bore much of the offensive burden for the Crimson. She led the team with an average of 1.05 points per game—the 28th-best mark in the country. And when the final buzzer on her career sounded as the Crimson fell to UNH in the Frozen Eight, Raimondi’s offense in her senior season had carried Harvard to an impressive run down the stretch...
...point guard from Fremont, Calif., went out the very next day against Alabama State and scored 18 points on 6-of-11 shooting. Building upon that performance, Robinson quickly became the Crimson’s undisputed leader on the court, topping the squad in minutes with 29.6 per game, and developed into the Ivy League’s most accurate three-point threat. Robinson transformed herself into a critical source of offense for the Crimson, ranking second on the team with 9.6 points per game. Entering the season with a .377 career percentage from long range, Robinson connected...