Word: second-year
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Gary W. Greer, a second-year student at the Medical School, said last week "there was never any organized form of underground student resistance" at the school until last month...
...areas has now been completed," enabling all students to complete study plans that will meet some areas' concentration requirements. Ebert's letter says, "Only students who have submitted an approved concentration program will be permitted to matriculate in September, 1977." As Ebert mailed out that statement, Gary Greer, a second-year medical student and chairman of the school's closest approximation to student government, was preparing to reveal that he had collected statements from three-fourths of the third-year class saying that they will not file concentration plans...
...odds with the views of some ACSR members, both past and present. Some members suggest that a bias exists in ACSR membership because of the strong predominance of individuals with business, corporate law, and economics backgrounds, among the group's alumni and faculty members. As Sabine Rodriguez '75, a second-year student at the Law School and a member of ACSR during its first three years says the University appears to believe that an alumnus who works in the arts in Boston is not as capable of judging the social value of shareholder resolution as a corporate lawyer...
...outsiders (as when a Johnny Carson figure tells a class, "How angry was the crowd? As angry as the Harvard Law faculty when Jimmy Carter announced his cabinet") rely on some knowledge of the school. How inside is the show? So inside that the Law Record reviewer, a second-year law student, confessed he understood about half the jokes; which suggests that anyone unfamiliar with the world north of the Science Center will find the humor even more impenetrable...
...placement office at the Law School, which helps students find summer jobs and employment for graduating students, has been a center of controversy since Gail Bowman, a black second-year law student made a complaint against a Chicago law firm in late 1975 for "racially offensive remarks" made in a job interview...