Word: starr
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Crimson senior Electa Sevier collected the game's first score with about 11 minutes gone in the first half. Vermont goalie Jen Starr stopped a Lori Barry header off a corner kick, but when Starr couldn't contain the ball, Sevier was there to kick the rebound in for a 1-0 Harvard lead...
Powered by the strong foot of forward Karin Pinezich, the Crimson extended its lead to 3-0. With roughly 10 minutes left in the first half, Pinezich put a 15-yd. shot past Starr into the upper corner of the Vermont goal...
...tenure decisions after the faculty has voted -- powers that provide him with some leverage. In fact, tenure is notoriously tough to win at Harvard, with the result that many promising untenured faculty members migrate out. Last year, for example, Bok vetoed tenure for Sociologist Paul Starr, whose 1982 book The Social Transformation of American Medicine had won a Pulitzer. The apparent reason: Starr was judged to be weak in the quantifiable data research deemed appropriate for a Harvard scholar. He is now tenured at Princeton's Institute for Advanced Study...
...Starr, a major force behind Jewish studies at Harvard, has also been a strong supporter of the Kennedy School of Government...
...Bunting Smith, David Aloian '49, Erwin N. Griswold, James L. Adams, Kenneth R. Andrews, Edward L. Barnes '38, Marvin Bower, Allan R. Crite, Paul A. Freund, Francis Keppel '38, Margaret G. Kivelson '50, Adetokunbo O. Lucas, Agnes Mongan, Raymond J. Nagle, Edward M. Purcell, Muriel S. Snowden '38, Harry Starr '21, Robert G. Stone Jr. '45, and Carl W. Walter...