Writer
Charles T. Kurzman
Latest Content
When Apathy Is Pathetic
A FEW DOZEN students risked their academic careers and set up structures in Harvard Yard to protest certain of the
Rejuvenating Radcliffe
R ADCLIFFE STILL EXISTS, and not just on paper. Radcliffe raises money, funds scholarships, runs a library, a research center,
Reflections on the SCR
T HIS MONTH, you're going to have visitors. Prestigious, interesting, famous visitors. They are going to come to your house
A Long and Winding Road
A N OLD AND jaded Harvard professor strolled past the Cabot House renovations last week and remarked that education at
Social Diseases
S ports question of the week, from Billy R. in Newark, New Jersey: "Is baseball going to end up like
Bad, Bad Imam
A bad man, a very bad man, a reactionary cleric, a towel-headed mullah ("towel-head" for short), a "cruel despot," a
Skocpol Negotiates Tenure Offer
Harvard seems to be negotiating in good faith with sociologist Theda R. Skocpol, whom President Bok tenured last month after
Some ROTC Classes May Get Credit
Harvard may sign an agreement granting students credit for a few Navy Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC) classes at MIT.
Faculty Votes to Award Degrees Posthumously
The Faculty agreed yesterday in a near-unanimous voice vote to grant posthumous degrees to students-who die after completing degree requirements
Waiting for the White Smoke: A Peek at Harvard's Tenure Searches
An Overview T enure searches at Harvard are said to be a serious, stately matter, with built-in checks and balances
The Ghosts of Protests Past...
E ASTER 1963. Seven thousand pacifists gather at the United Nations Plaza in New York for the annual Faster Peace
Harvard Says Junior Faculty Is Happy
Harvard yesterday released the results of last year's extensive survey of junior faculty, painting a generally positive picture of the
Minority Student Protesters Rally for Third World Faculty
Several dozen students rallied yesterday afternoon in front of University Hall, draping a Ku Klux Klan mask on the statue
Tenure in the Courts
I t is referred to, by those who watch such things, as the $1 million decision-whether to grant tenure to
Tim Scanlon
It's a steep climb up three floors to the bare office of newly arrived Professor of Philosophy Thomas N. Scanlon,