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...provide visible accessibility to the Peabody collections through a multi-year, rotating loan program...

Author: By Joseph F Kahn, | Title: Peabody Asks Texan To Rent its Artifacts | 7/4/1985 | See Source »

Three years after former Dean of the Faculty Henry Rosovsky set up a committee to establish the burgeoning, multi-disciplinary field here, Harvard remains the only Ivy League institution without any sort of women's studies program. Although the committee was empowered to tenure a professor jointly in women's studies and another discipline, it has yet to snag any topflight scholar. Last spring Harvard lost renowned feminist literary critic Elaine Showalter to Princeton, which has demonstrated its commitment to the field. Apparently the committee has become bogged down, holding out for a savior both to fill this single chair...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Legitimize the Field | 6/6/1985 | See Source »

...bother me. Just like the issue of civil rights for American Blacks at the '68 Olympics, the issue of apartheid is something that calls for stand-taking. The South African government deserves all the pressure that can be brought upon it, and in my opinion, that includes divestment by multi-national corporations doing business there. A symbolic gesture? Maybe. But I happen to be a firm believer in the power of symbolism...

Author: By Brian W. Kladko, | Title: Playing Olympic Games | 5/20/1985 | See Source »

Eike Ezeji-Okoye, Perkins is a multi-talented runner. Although his specialties are the middle-distance events, such as the 800, 1000 and 1500, he runs cross country in the fall...

Author: By Beck Hartman, | Title: Steve Ezeji-Okoye and John Perkins | 5/10/1985 | See Source »

...this work, Sartre betrays himself as a multi-dimensional "Superman" of sorts. He is a very human human-being, an intellectual, a scholar, a lover and a poet. The Diaries reveal Sartre not only as a man able to joke, but as one concerned with his physical being, even with such silly, unimportant things as his physical appearance. He talks of his need to diet, while betraying his concern that he is not strong enough to stick to it. "What am I to do?" he asks himself. "Drink up, thinking: I'll start my diet tomorrow, today it's impossible...

Author: By Eunicel. An, | Title: Being & Sartre | 5/1/1985 | See Source »

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