Writer
Robert C. Pozen
Latest Content
Building a Bridge Over the River
More than a river separates Harvard Law School (HLS) and Harvard Business School (HBS), so well-intentioned discussions about making them
Which McCarthy?
While Senator Eugene McCarthy and many others have continued their vociferous protests against the Vietnam War, conservatives in Congress have
Boston's Vocation
Vocational schools in Boston have reached a crisis. Less than fifteen hundred students graduate yearly, many in outdated jobs like
A Settlement House With a Difference
What comes into your mind when you think of a settlement or neighborhood house? Basketball games, museum trips, and some
Two Kinds of Ghetto Organizing
Last June, Roxbury had a riot. A group callel Mothers for Adequate Welfare (MAWS) staged a sit-in in Grove Hall,
Runcorn and Skelmersdale: Cities Designed for 1994
(The British New Towns movement, begun by the Labour Government after World War II, now includes some twenty-two cities in
British New Towns
Preplanned cities are big business for the English Government. Ten small towns are growing into old communities around London. Twelve
4 Off-Campus Students, Landlord Fight Against Housing Regulation
Four off-campus Harvard students and their landlord fought before the Cambridge Board of Appeals yesterday to keep their Greenough St.house--and
Challenge Changes, But Flexibility Stays PBH Asks More of Its Teachers And Reaches for Underachievers
A 12-year-old cameraman corrals good-looking Cliffise as they walk by the Coop, persuades them to pose, and snaps their picture.
HUAC and Harvard
Last summer the House Un-American Activities Committee treated the public to a rare political extravaganza. During its investigation of anti-war
Foreign Aid
Foreign aid has fallen upon bad times. In President Johnson's aid proposals to Congress last month, he called for emphasis
The Harvard Review
The Summer-Fall issue of The Harvard Review-- a collection of essays, book reviews, and relevant speeches--illuminates some of the contradictions
New Towns
Cities have historically responded to population growth by expanding their limits or overflowing into adjoining suburbs. Within the past few