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...Ameer was previously responsible for advising the 36 visiting students from the Gulf coast displaced by Hurricane Katrina this fall. Lambert-Sluder’s new role will place him in charge of the over 180 peer advisers hand-picked in April. He will also monitor future efforts to select, train, and evaluate these peer advisors. Lambert-Sluder, a recent Currier House graduate, was hired by the College last year to work on Curricular Review reforms. The peer advising program is the APO’s first large step towards reforming undergraduate advising, and the office will work extensively this...
While most Harvard affiliates are taking the summer off, Katey Stone—the head coach of the women’s hockey team—is taking a new summer job. On Wednesday, USA Hockey named Stone coach of the U.S. Women’s National Under-22 Select Team. Stone will lead the country’s top players under the age of 22 through the Women’s National Festival in August, and from those hopefuls will select a roster of 20 to vie in a three-game series against the Canadian U-22 team...
...given up on that goal. Instead, it wants to spend $2.4 billion through 2011 developing a "Multiple Kill Vehicle" that will unleash a dozen or more mini-interceptors to destroy all potential warheads. "This reduces the burden on sensors and algorithms, which no longer need to be programmed to select one, best target," the Pentagon says. Of course, a better interceptor won't be worth much if the booster designed to hurl it into space stays stuck in its silo because of rusty parts or sloppy software...
...meaning. The word marriage means a union between a man and woman open to life. I hold that a homosexual couple does not constitute a family." It seems likely that Benedict has chosen his destination strategically, in order to hammer home a point. (He is free to select his foreign jaunts from endless invitations.) "It's a gift for the Pope," says Austen Ivereigh, a top aide to Cormac Cardinal Murphy-O'Connor, Archbishop of Westminster. "He can say, 'Look at Zapatero, this is what really underlies European secularism.' In Spain, he will look like he's articulating what...
...social security and a student ID card. But the 23,000 or 24,000 others are still twice too many: many of them aren't really made for this kind of study. They rapidly fail within a year, maybe two. That's the real catastrophe: we end up selecting students through failure, but we don't dare to select them before they enter - that's considered to be antidemocratic. Was it any different when you were a student here in 1968? In 1968 I was 19 years old, and I detested those bourgeois, golden youths breaking their toys...