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Government Professor Harvey C. Mansfield ’53, white-skinned and gray-haired at 78, counts this past academic year as his 47th year on the faculty at Harvard. The acclaimed scholar is emblematic of the “Old Harvard” image of the faculty—predominantly aging and white...

Author: By Noah S. Rayman and Elyssa A. L. Spitzer, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS | Title: Faculty 2.0: Revitalizing the Face of the Faculty | 5/27/2010 | See Source »

...five years later, even through a decade of expansion, the proportions of women and minorities in the faculty as compared with their white male colleagues have changed only slightly. Today, a quarter of the University faculty are women and 17 percent are minorities, according to the 2009 annual report of the Office of Faculty Development and Diversity...

Author: By Noah S. Rayman and Elyssa A. L. Spitzer, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS | Title: Faculty 2.0: Revitalizing the Face of the Faculty | 5/27/2010 | See Source »

...Garret Penn State Open, and teammates sophomore James Hawrot and freshman Thomas Kolasa captured fifth in their respective weapons. In the Ivy League Championships, the men finished tied for second place after defeating Yale, Brown, and Columbia and falling to Penn and Princeton. Staller and freshman Ben White earned first-team All-Ivy honors while Kolasa, Hawrot, and co-captain Karl Harmenberg were named to the second team...

Author: By B. marjorie Gullick, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: SEASON RECAP: Fencing Claims Fifth in NCAA, Vloka Takes Title | 5/27/2010 | See Source »

When Chris Pizzotti ’08-’09 traded in his crimson-colored jersey for the green and white of the New York Jets, the 6’5” Ivy Player of the Year quarterback certainly left some big shoes to fill on the Harvard football team...

Author: By Kevin T. Chen, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: MALE BREAKOUT ATHLETE OF THE YEAR: Junior Emerges as Leader | 5/27/2010 | See Source »

...little about who he is. Acts of dishonesty in academia, and elsewhere, may bring people like this some measure of success, but it also deprives them of an actual self. In the week before my freshman year at Harvard I participated in an orientation week hiking trip in the White Mountains of New Hampshire, and Adam Wheeler was a member of that trip. When the news of his story starting spreading rapidly, I looked back at the pictures of Adam and me in the woods and tried to call up any memory I had of him. With the veracity...

Author: By Marcel E. Moran | Title: Why Honesty Matters to Us | 5/27/2010 | See Source »

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