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...experiences “got me to see public health working in another country,” Han says, adding that she was able to see “the application of what she had been learning” term-time...

Author: By Juliana L. Stone, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Global Health Focus Grows at Harvard | 4/29/2010 | See Source »

...these courses are becoming more than just a mix of elective classes.  Next year, the secondary field in health policy—which was first approved in 2007—will become a joint public health and global health secondary, according to Deborah L. Whitney, the executive director of the Harvard Interfaculty Initiative in Health Policy...

Author: By Juliana L. Stone, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Global Health Focus Grows at Harvard | 4/29/2010 | See Source »

...given Harvard a “platform to address global health in a way we haven’t been able to before by encouraging more broad-based classes and innovative teaching techniques that allow a faculty member...to bring what she does over at the Harvard School of Public Health [for example] to the undergrads,” Getman says...

Author: By Juliana L. Stone, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Global Health Focus Grows at Harvard | 4/29/2010 | See Source »

...influence on other countries in the region. There are gays being stoned to death in Egypt; there are roads that are accessible only to Muslims in Saudi Arabia; Jordan recently revoked Jordanian citizenship from some 3,000 Palestinians (I do not recall the Obama administration making a strong public condemnation of this injustice, nor the Crimson Staff demanding the U.S. to pressure the Jordanian government). Instead, the Crimson Staff simply says that if the U.S. distances itself from Israel, it might “foster our relationships with its neighbors.” Foreign policy cannot survive a double standard...

Author: By Joseph Mandelbaum | Title: LETTER: Foreign Policy Cannot Survive a Double Standard | 4/29/2010 | See Source »

According to academic psychologists and counselors, as well as the accounts of students themselves, personal and private outpourings in public spaces stem from a very human need for self-expression. Yet the competing need to erase any identifying traces leads, as in the case of Adams’ bathroom stalls, to a phenomenon of anonymous authorship...

Author: By Elyssa A. L. Spitzer, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The Writing on the Stalls | 4/29/2010 | See Source »

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