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Nicole Seligman

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Serving in loco parentis

The freshman dean's office expects a total of 1617 freshmen to move into Harvard Yard in the next few weeks,

Jazz

It ain't the Village, but all things considered the Hub's not a bad place to catch some good jazz or

Hasty Pudding to Honor Johnny Carson, Liz Taylor

Longtime NBC "Tonight Show" host Johnny Carson and sometime "Tonight Show" guest Elizabeth Taylor will travel to Cambridge separately next

Some Kind Of Progress Report

In November 1973, the federal government accepted Harvard's affirmative action plan and ended a three-year, $250,000 effort by the University

Affirmative Action Study Indicates Little Progress

The University has made little progress in hiring and admitting women and minorities, but expects to improve that record by

Jumping the Eight Ball

Billie "Lady Day" Holiday, that throaty singer of the blues, had the right idea when she maintained, "It is the

A Welfare Mother

A WELFARE MOTHER is a footnote to New York City life. It presents a tiny bit of information, intentionally limited

Radcliffe Aid Drive Falls Short of Goal

The University's fund drive to support financial aid for undergraduate women has fallen more than $700,000 short of its predicted

The Union That Never Made It

After weeks of intensive organization and proselytizing, a small core of graduate students successfully engineered a one-day strike in the

Waiting for the report

Waiting for the compliance report of the Boston Office of Civil Rights (OCR) is like waiting for the Rome-to-Milan train

OCR Officer Will Not Sign Harvard Compliance Report

The assistant director of the Boston Office of Civil Rights (OCR) has refused to sign a long-awaited report on Harvard's

Don't Call Me, I'll Call You

"Massachusetts was Kennedy's Georgia," Milton Katz, Stimson Professor of Law, said yesterday, explaining why the new administration will almost surely

Asian-Americans: Fighting on Two Fronts

T HE COLLEGE'S REFUSAL to admit two Chinese women to a freshman minority orientatio banquet earlier this year irritated a

Most Massachusetts Incumbents Win; Voters Adopt Equal Rights Amendment

Choruses of "I Am Woman" greeted reports early this morning at Boston's Parker House that Massachusetts voters had approved the

Guns, Bottles, Kilowatts and the ERA

Part of the reason for high heating costs in New England is the lack of a local oil refinery and

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