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The Harvard Crimson is the student newspaper at Harvard University, an Ivy League university in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The newspaper was founded in 1873, [ 1 ] and is run entirely by Harvard College undergraduate students.
The Bowdoin Prizes are prestigious awards given annually to Harvard University undergraduate and graduate students. [1] From the income of the bequest of Governor James Bowdoin, AB 1745, prizes are offered to students at the university in graduate and undergraduate categories for essays in the English language, in the natural sciences, in Greek and in Latin. [2]
Edward Kennard Rand FBA (December 20, 1871 – October 28, 1945), known widely as E.K. Rand or to his peers as EKR, [1] [2] was an American classicist and medievalist.He served as the Pope Professor of Latin at Harvard University from 1901 until 1942, during which period he was also the Sather Professor at the University of California, Berkeley, for two terms.
Homeless to Harvard: The Liz Murray Story (2003), a Lifetime biographical television film, which chronicles the real life story of Liz Murray (played by Thora Birch), who overcomes homelessness and a dysfunctional family to gain entry and a scholarship to Harvard after winning a New York Times-sponsored essay competition.
The Harvard Crimson is the nickname of the intercollegiate athletic teams of Harvard College.The school's teams compete in NCAA Division I.As of 2013, there were 42 Division I intercollegiate varsity sports teams for women and men at Harvard, more than at any other NCAA Division I college in the country. [3]
Kyla Golding, a Black Harvard senior, wrote in an op-ed in the student newspaper, The Harvard Crimson, that “at the mountaintop for the Black woman, there is no promised land. No liberation, no ...
Sole Rock N Roll Survivor Archived October 17, 2007, at the Wayback Machine – Wurtzel's piece from The Harvard Crimson which won the 1987 Rolling Stone College Journalism Award; A Conversation with Elizabeth Wurtzel, Author and First-Year Lawyer October 11, 2008 blog post from WSJ.com; Green, Andrew (April 14, 2020). "Obituary Elizabeth Wurtzel".
The Harvard Crimson, the nation's oldest college newspaper, named Raquel Coronell Uribe as its first Hispanic president in its nearly 150-year history. Harvard Crimson, almost 150 years old, names ...