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1917 T.W. Lamont 92, chairman of the Harvard Endowment Committee, announces a novel plan to raise $10 million for the permanent endowment by appealing, for the first time, to all alumni and to believers in Harvard other than its own sons, rather than to a limited number of wealthy benefactors.
1932 The Graduate School of Education, with Carnegie Foundation funding, is trying to determine the value of mechanical aids in classrooms, including the use of talking films in junior high schools as a means of improving science instruction.
1947 President Conant, in his annual report, advocates continuing federal support for professional training, especially in the sciences, but warns against any University connection in peacetime with secret research or development.
The Bulletin calls Harvard a bargain among prestigious schools in the Northeast, despite its rich mans college reputation: it now costs a total of $494 a semester, compared to $502.50 at Princeton, $524.50 at Williams, $544.50 at Columbia, and $650 at Yale.
1962 Some 200 Harvard and Radcliffe students join several thousand other undergraduates in picketing the White House, demanding a Turn Toward Peace. The Crimson complains that any worthwhile ideas that the students may have are being jeopardized by their tactic of mass protest.
1967 As an experiment, Lamont Library will be open in the spring term to Radcliffe undergraduates and Harvards 650 women graduate students.
1972 In his first annual report, President Derek Bok asserts that recent upheavals at Harvard have led to an unanticipated developmenta heightened sensitivity among the Universitys separate faculties to each others interests and problems. However painful the circumstances, he writes, barriers were broken down in ways that will serve the University well in future years.
1992 Some 1,800 shoppers attend the first meeting of Contemporary African-American Cinema, offered by visiting lecturer in Afro-American studies Shelton J. (Spike) Lee. His enrollment limit for the course is 60.
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