Word: interims
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...Interim President Derek C. Bok has not yet received or responded to the letter, his spokesman John D. Longbrake said. [SEE CORRECTION BELOW...
...members are as eager as ever to engage with students who actively seek them out. However, the CUE is espoused as the place of reckoning for hoardes of "delinquent" faculty, professors with early morning office hours are cited for negligence, and student-advocacy hawks nod with knowing smiles at interim President Derek Bok’s dismissal of the Ph.D. as "the only major professional program in the United States that does not prepare students for the activity that they will spend most of their professional lives [pursuing...
Ultimately, it was America’s greater flexibility and willingness to make an interim deal, as well as China’s cooperation, that made the present agreement possible. Indeed, China’s role cannot be overemphasized. As perhaps the only nation in the world capable of bringing North Korea to its knees without resorting to military force, China’s willingness to implement limited sanctions after North Korea’s nuclear test was crucial...
...news article "Kennedy Proposes Higher Aid" contained several errors. First, it listed the wrong title for Senior Director of Communications John D. Longbrake. Longbrake is a University spokesman, not Interim President Derek C. Bok's spokesman. Second, it incorrectly attributed remarks by Director of Federal Relations Suzanne Day to Director of Financial Aid Sally C. Donahue. The article should have stated that Day "hoped Harvard's outreach to low-income applicants would set an example for Congress as they considered the legislation." The following quote was given by Day--not Donahue: "With our recent financial aid initiative, we have taken...
...under the direction of interim president Samuel Langdon, class of 1740, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts officially recognized Harvard College as a university. A sign of Harvard’s increasing strength as an institution, the recognition came at a time of growing unrest among Harvard’s students. Just miles from the Yard, young men were dying for the Revolution. No longer physically beaten by their instructors and increasingly recognized for their merit, students were taking a stand and trying to take control of their school. The president was becoming increasingly accountable; the sparks of the modern university were...