November 29, 1972: Nixon names three alumni to his cabinet, Elliot L. Richardson ’41, Former Crimson President Caspar W. Weinberger ’38 and Roy L. Ash Harvard Business School ’47.
December 4, 1972: Harvard’s Memorial Church ordains its first female minister. The ordination marks the first time a woman has been named a minister by the university since its founding in 1636.
December 15, 1972: The board of Harvard Student Agencies vetoes selling contraceptives in the Freshman Union.
Read more in News
Lost in the Blur of the Changing SquareRecommended Articles
-
Enrollment at Kennedy School Shows 21 Per Cent IncreaseTotal enrollment at the Kennedy School of Government is up from 253 students in November 1976 to 305 this month,
-
Harvard To Retain Stock PolicyTwo members of an ad hoc advisory committee to President Bok yesterday predicted the University will not sub-stantially alter its
-
Class Of 1973 TIME LINESeptember 1969 History professor Ernest R. May (right) takes over as dean of the College after Fred L. Glimp '50
-
4 Years of Harvard: 1971-1975SEPTEMBER 1971 1,556 members of the Class of 1975 (1,220 Harvard men, 336 Radcliffe women) arrive in Cambridge, at the
-
Destroying Cambodia's PeaceThe following is the excepted text of a speech delivered by Huot Sambath, member of the Cambodian National United Front's
-
Former Harvard Basketball Coach Selected for Hall of FameHarvard affiliates have been named to a wide variety of Hall of Fames throughout the world over the years. But ...