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Active Houses November 2, 1955 One of President Lowell’s main reasons for building seven upper-class Houses was to provide a social and recreational unit for the large and scattered student body. Today, although College students are no longer spread throughout Cambridge rooming houses, the enrollment is larger than Lowell ever could have guessed in 1930. The enlarged College of 1955 demands that each House take on an increasingly important job: to provide new activities for its members and to help organize existing College-wide activities on a House level. The College, of course, has numerous clubs...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, | Title: Active Houses | 6/6/2006 | See Source »

...point of view expressed above, with its emphasis on fluidity, indicates the reason for The Crimson’s strictures on a most rigid J.F. Dulles, a certain lack of backbone was its main criticism of vice-president Dick Nixon, the Achilles heel of the Republican Party...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: A Year of Crimson Politicking | 6/6/2006 | See Source »

Some students alleged that the main problem lay not with security measures but with deeper problems with male-dominated society. In October of 1981, SOS chair Elisabeth M. Einaudi ’83 and Peggy A. Mason ’82, chair of the Harvard “Take Back the Night” (TBTN) committee, wrote an op-ed in The Crimson calling for improved safety measures and criticizing the mentality that generated violence against women. The letter praised recent security improvements like the shuttle system and increase in the number of security guards, but it further suggested that...

Author: By M. AIDAN Kelly, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Quad Rape Created Urgency For Improved Safety | 6/5/2006 | See Source »

...University’s brief in ’78 stated. Supreme Court Chief Justice Lewis F. Powell cited the Harvard admissions standard as an example of sound policy.But at least one man at the University questioned whether affirmative action harms more than it helps.Klitgaard says his main purpose in writing the report was to analyze whether students benefit from diversity.He hypothesizes that a graduate school of education may benefit from admitting students from both the inner-city and the suburbs, and that a divinity school could enrich its educational experience by admitting students who follow different faiths. But diversity...

Author: By Katherine M. Gray, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Report Questioned Diversity And Affirmative Action | 6/5/2006 | See Source »

...University about this as it was clear that there weren’t enough women on the faculty relative to the number of qualified women,” she says. “The feeling was that women needed role models and mentoring, and that was one of the main things that RUS worked at when we were there.”Although former WEAL national president Carol B. Grossman said in 1980 that she expected support from the DOL, the KSG was eventually let off the hook by government authorities after an investigation.Although initially the DOL noted...

Author: By Alexandra C. Bell, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Tweaking the Minority Numbers at the Kennedy School | 6/5/2006 | See Source »

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