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...quick to acknowledge that students?? industriousness and rivalries have produced many personal successes and worthwhile organizations. It is also good to know that the entrepreneurial spirit is alive and well in Harvard Yard. Yet, it seems pertinent to ask: at what cost, and toward what wisdom...

Author: By Emily C. Ingram | Title: Enter to Grow in Wisdom | 6/3/2008 | See Source »

...jointly-proposed bill by the Harvard Republicans and Democrats. The bill aims to allow the ROTC courses Harvard students take at MIT to be printed on their school transcripts. Furthermore, it recommends that Harvard add that it is “proud” of the ROTC students?? service to the country in its description of the organization in the Student’s Handbook. Yet while this measure is a step in the right direction, it doesn’t go nearly far enough. If we, the students, are truly our college’s most important...

Author: By Derek Flanzraich | Title: Hate the Policy, Not the Program | 6/3/2008 | See Source »

...talk on these topics is not enough evidence of students?? ambitions, then they are better illustrated by the number of new student organizations and publications registered each year, not to mention the popularity of founding internet start-ups–a trend that has swept across campus in the last few years more quickly than word spread in October 2007 of the sham scabies scare in Pennypacker...

Author: By Emily C. Ingram | Title: Enter to Grow in Wisdom | 6/3/2008 | See Source »

...cost, it seems, lies in students?? stress levels and mental health. According to the most recent senior survey conducted by The Harvard Crimson in 2007, 40 percent of students said they had solicited mental health treatment during their college years. This statistic, though daunting, is hardly a surprise, given the number of glassy-eyed students who guzzle energy drinks in Lamont Library night after night during the academic year...

Author: By Emily C. Ingram | Title: Enter to Grow in Wisdom | 6/3/2008 | See Source »

...than “swanking it up” in a New York City sublet. Some of these extraordinarily dedicated young people are my friends, and I’m privileged to know them. But because of the culture Harvard has fashioned through its ban of the ROTC, these students?? biggest extracurricular is also their biggest source of separation from the University. If it weren’t for the few vestiges of their commitment that we see—Army fatigues worn every Tuesday or that sleek white Navy uniform—the rest of the Harvard...

Author: By Derek Flanzraich | Title: Hate the Policy, Not the Program | 6/3/2008 | See Source »

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