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Caille M. Millner

Latest Content

Realities Make Living Wage Campaign's Claims More Credible

Earlier this month, student protestors for three campus causes stood on the steps of Memorial Church and called for "Justice

HLS Center Watches La. Court Case

It seems like a perfect match--Harvard law students in need of real life experience paired with clients who need real

'Net Furballs Bring Fame, Fortune But Fade Fast

First the dancing hamsters made Thomas H. Lotze '01 laugh. Then they made him famous. And just as quickly, the

Running From Office

I highly doubt any American born after 1975 is all that impressed with the concept of government right now. I

Harvard University Press: Not Your Average Publisher

Take a look at a Harvard University Press book. Chances are good it's attractive, streamlined and slickly published. It looks

Panelists Debate Role of Feminism on Campus

Six student panelists struggled to define feminism and pinpoint its role at Harvard in a debate last night at 2

Fallows and Friends Launch Rowing Web Site

There are two things in the childhood of Thomas M. Fallows '99 that made his Web site, Rowers World (www.rowersworld.com)

Umbrella Minority Students Alliance Unable to Build Ethnic Solidarity

As Harvard College's population begins to look more and more like the rest of America-currently 41 percent of students identify

Bond Addresses Racial Injustice

Taking a strong stand on racial politics and fair representation in America, Julian Bond, chair of the National Association for

Gender Gap Persists Among Black Students

At the first Black Students' Association party Friday night, first-year women were introduced to a social phenomenon they will soon

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Complicit In Crime

In the past month there have been two cases of children killing children: the school slaying in Arkansas, where two

Kincaid Reads From Latest Novel, `Brother'

Approximately 200 people crowded into Longfellow Hall yesterday to hear a reading by acclaimed author and Visiting Professor of Afro-American

Democratizing Oscar

Ahh, Oscar. In 70 years of deciding the merits and failings of film, the Academy Awards have been glorified and

Student Groups Seek Diverse Membership

Help Wanted: Extracurricular organization with predominantly white and/or male membership seeks students with variety of ethnic and cultural backgrounds for

Profs. West, Carrasco Seek to Transcend Traditional Dialogues on Race

Speaking to an audience of several hundred people in Sanders Theater yesterday, Professor Cornel R. West '74 and David Carrasco,

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