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Events throughout the Houses and all over campus will prove to be entertaining and enlightening. Go check it out...hopefully you will not need your umbrella...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ARTSFirst Returns To Dazzle Us | 4/28/1994 | See Source »

...Silent Blessings," according to its writer and director, Roberto Buso-Garcia, '94, "is the story of two Puerto Rican brothers living in Cambridge, chronicling a string of critical moments in their romantic, familial and cultural lives." The emergence of the film and its umbrella organization, the Harvard/Radcliffe Filmmakers, is part of a concerted effort by about 40 to 50 Harvard students to revolutionize independent filmmaking at the college. As the premiere draws near, the people who worked with the film recalled its production, filming, and the ups and downs of what for many was a new kind of artistic experience...

Author: By Ann M. Mikkelsen, | Title: Learning the Value of Small Blessings | 4/28/1994 | See Source »

Leave it to the self-proclaimed "umbrella organization of women's concerns" to turn so sourly partisan an issue like violence against women...

Author: By Kelly M. Bowdren, | Title: Take Your and Night and... | 4/21/1994 | See Source »

Given that Afro-Am falls under the wide umbrella of E.S., the formation of a true E.S. department could only have one outcome: Afro-Am would be completely merged into it. Of course, the University would have to create some new course and hire some new professors to balance the E.S. curriculum with other minorities, but all of them would be essentially equal in the vast expanse of E.S. With only six professors on the Faculty of Arts and Sciences actually appointed in Afro-Am (along with a slew of visiting lecturers), the University could represent every minority proportionately with...

Author: By Daniel Altman, | Title: A New General Studies | 4/4/1994 | See Source »

...admit that as a freshman, I wondered at divided nature of Harvard's Hispanic community, and the mysteriously absent "umbrella" organization. It has taken me almost two years to realize that such an organization is not only unrealistic and impracticable, but also undesirable. As a Hispanic, I have come to understand the necessity for varied and specific cultural organizations. As a Cuban-American, I welcome the appearance of CAUSA, the Cuban-American Undergraduate Student Association, onto the campus cultural scene...

Author: By Manuel F. Cachan, | Title: Don't Call Me Latino | 3/24/1994 | See Source »

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