January 26, 1973: The military draft officially ends.
February 10, 1973: Harvard’s administration assuages fears that the energy crisis gripping the northeast will affect the University. The University is heated by waste steam created by the Cambridge Electric plant.
March 19, 1973: After voting in the beginning of the month to revive a union, graduate students and teaching fellows begin a strike to protest a new financial aid plan.
March 27, 1973: Marlon Brando refuses to accept an Oscar for best actor, citing the treatment of American Indians by the film industry.
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 ...