Word: williams
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...exploring the topics from sociological, philosophical, political, and economic angles. He added that the center will collaborate with professors at the School of Public Health, Kennedy School of Government, and Harvard Medical School.A core group of six professors will work at the center, including Elhauge and Law School professors William W. Fisher, Martha L. Minow, Charles R. Nesson ’60, and Alan A. Stone ’50.Bass Professor of Government Michael J. Sandel, who currently teaches a course on ethics and biotechnology for Law School and Graduate School of Arts and Sciences students, will also participate...
Harvard may not explicitly endorse time off as a treatment, but the practice is glorified in Harvard’s administrative halls. In 2000, William Fitzsimmons, dean of admissions and financial aid, Marlyn McGrath Lewis, director of admissions, and Charles Ducey, then-director of the Bureau of Study Counsel, co-authored “Time Out or Burn Out For the Next Generation...
...exactly the same speed. Maybe the Boston marathon?” Although Warren has brought publicity to joggling, long-term jogglers doubt that joggling will catch on beyond its current scope of interest. “Joggling will always appeal just to a fringe group,” said William R. Giduz, joggling director for the International Jugglers’ Association, an group founded in 1947. “It’s been around since the ’80s and has never taken off to hit the big time.” Warren advised would-be jogglers...
...administration make a decision as soon as possible,” Petersen said. Several Tulane visiting freshman students, however, said yesterday that they did not favor a petition. “I actually do not think they should organize a petition,” said Tulane visiting freshman William Y. Ke ’09. “Harvard is an example for everyone else. If Harvard were to say yes, there would be a mass exodus from Tulane.” Susana M. Kostaras is another visiting Tulane freshman who is not advocating a petition...
...state “where not very many students come to Harvard,” I usually don’t refer to people who live in New England as “a bunch of elitist northern Yankees,” as Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid William R. Fitzsimmons ’67 says many other students from similar states...