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Emily J. Nelson

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After Outcry, MAC to Stay Open ’til March

Students will have one extra month to get in tip-top shape before breaking out shorts and tank tops for spring

Thrifty Website Donates to Charity

CORRECTION APPENDED In an effort to help students save money while fundraising for charity, two Harvard undergraduates have launched a

Students Elected To Plan Events

A large part of Harvard undergraduates’ social life next fall has been placed in the hands of a diverse group

Two Professors Honored For Teaching

Students from diverse disciplines who took Core courses in photography and linguistics last fall had the benefit of being taught

Professor Predicts Possible Civil War After 2008 Vote

Think America could never face another Civil War? Think again. According to one Harvard Business School Professor, a civil war

Few Perks for Faculty with Kids, Profs Say

In a “100 Best Schools for Professors” list, faculty members say Harvard does not achieve the number one ranking in

New Classes Set to Debut

While lecture halls continue to fill for Life Sciences 1a and Social Analysis 10, Dean for the Humanities Maria Tatar

Harvard To Open Office in Brazil This Summer

Harvard University’s David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies (DRCLAS) will open a new office in São Paulo, Brazil this

IOP Announces Politically Diverse Fellows

A potential 2008 presidential candidate, Mark R. Warner, and Arnold Schwarzenegger’s former chief of staff, Patricia Clarey, will serve as

Hist 10a Could Be Ancient History

EDITOR'S NOTE and CORRECTION APPENDED History 10a, “Western Societies, Politics, and Cultures: From Antiquity to 1650,” could soon be ancient

Buck To Retire By Fall

A key architect of the College’s History of Science undergraduate program will retire this semester after a four-decade academic and

Students Welcome New IOP Fellows

Six new Institute of Politics (IOP) fellows introduced the topics of their study groups last night before a crowd of

Boston Crime Rates on the Rise

Crime rates in Cambridge have remained flat in recent years, while violent crime in Boston is skyrocketing, part of a

Gov Dep't Exodus Continues as Schickler Departs

Eric Schickler, the Government Department’s director of undergraduate studies, will be departing Harvard for the University of California, Berkeley, exacerbating

Ex-Religion Course Spawns Book

CORRECTION APPENDED Brian Palmer may have only taught Religion 1529 for one semester, but it provided him with enough raw

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