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Campus & Community
Bell ringing will accompany Commencement
A peal of bells will ring throughout Cambridge next week, on Thursday (June 9). For the 17th consecutive year, a number of neighboring churches and institutions will ring their bells in celebration of the City of Cambridge and of Harvards 354th Commencement Exercises.
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Campus & Community
Chemist, card shark Liu takes off
In some corners of Las Vegas, Harvard chemist David Liu is viewed as a dangerous man.
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Campus & Community
Police reports
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending May 30. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor, and is available online at http://www.hupd.harvard.edu/.
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Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
June 19, 1638 – Shortly before this date, Nathaniel Eaton, first Master of the College, moves with his family from Charlestown into a house in the Yard. By Sept. 17,…
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Campus & Community
KSG students help a city balance books
When Bryan Richardson signed up for a lecture course on public finance at the Kennedy School of Government last fall, he never expected to be earning his grade by hobnobbing with urban police officers. This material can be kind of dry in the classroom, the 26-year-old from Tulsa, Okla., recalled. We all hoped to apply…
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Campus & Community
Paradisaical
A month of rain has rendered the Yard a glowing paradise of greenery.
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Campus & Community
Chinese medicine topic of winning essay
The Fairbank Center for East Asian Research at Harvard has named Thomas C. Tsai 05 the winner of its 2005 Taiwan Studies Essay Prize. Tsai is a concentrator in history and science and a candidate for the certificate for health policy.
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Campus & Community
Harvard Review story in ‘Best American Series’
For the fourth consecutive year, a piece from Harvard Review has been selected for inclusion in The Best American Series (Houghton Mifflin), a showcase for the years finest poetry, short stories, and essays since 1915. Justice Shiva Ram Murthy, by Rishi Reddi, was chosen for the 2005 edition of The Best American Short Stories by…
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Campus & Community
Prizes in Germanic literatures, languages awarded
Harvards Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures recently awarded Kerstin Luise Tremel 05 the Bernhard Blume Prize for her thesis Literrorisierung: German Literary Approaches to the Red Army Faction. This prize is awarded to the graduating senior who has written the best honors thesis on a German subject and whose performance in courses offered toward…
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Campus & Community
Harvard art museums in need of volunteer docents
Harvard University Art Museums (HUAM) is currently seeking volunteers interested in public art education for its museum docent program. The program consists of approximately 35 volunteer guides who give tours of the Fogg Art Museum, the Busch-Reisinger Museum, and the Arthur M. Sackler Museum.
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Campus & Community
First Presidential Instruction Technology Fellows awarded
After its first year in operation, Harvards Presidential Instructional Technology Fellows program is getting positive reviews from faculty members and student fellows alike, who say the program both increases interaction between faculty and students and results in improved course content available on the Web.
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Campus & Community
Reunion events abound across campus
An estimated 7,000 people (including 5,000 alumni/ae) are expected to attend reunion activities, which begin Monday (June 6) and continue through June 11. Here is a list of the activities.
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Campus & Community
Career Forum set for June 14
Employment Services, collaborating with a University-wide organizing committee, is hosting its seventh annual career forum on June 14. This years event will be held at the Graduate School of Designs Gund Hall, 48 Quincy St. The event will be open to the public from 3 to 7 p.m.
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Campus & Community
Sports in brief
Baseball heads west to take on Titans Harvard baseball will represent the Ivy League in NCAA tournament action this Friday (June 3) when the Crimson (29-15 overall) take on defending…
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Campus & Community
HUAM names Voigt to new director post
Thomas W. Lentz, Elizabeth and John Moors Cabot Director of Harvard University Art Museums (HUAM), recently announced the appointment of Bradford W. Voigt as the first director of institutional advancement for the art museums. Voigt will join HUAM in this new position on July 18.
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Campus & Community
HGLC names 2005 awardees
The Harvard Gay & Lesbian Caucus (HGLC) announced earlier this spring that Alphonse Fletcher Jr. A.B. 87 and Massachusetts Rep. Alice K. Wolf M.P.A. 78, IOP 94 will receive the HGLC Civil Rights Award and Ally for Justice Award, respectively. The two will be presented with the awards at the caucus annual Commencement Day dinner on June…
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Campus & Community
In brief
Reischauer Institute seeks essay submissions The deadline for submitting works for the 2005 Noma-Reischauer Essay Prizes in Japanese Studies, given to the best graduate and undergraduate papers on a Japan-related…
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Campus & Community
Newsmakers
Three Harvard doctoral candidates receive Dibner Fellowships from MIT The Dibner Institute for the History of Science and Technology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has awarded fellowships to three…
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Campus & Community
Erspamer named to FAS faculty
Francesco Erspamer, a scholar with broad expertise in Italian literature, culture, and history from the Renaissance to the present, has been named professor of Romance languages and literatures in Harvard Universitys Faculty of Arts and Sciences, effective July 1.
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Campus & Community
Bhabha to head Humanities Center
In its relatively short 20-year history, the Harvard Humanities Center in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) has become a renowned hub of intellectual discourse and a resource for humanities scholars throughout the Boston area, welcoming graduate students, faculty, and scholars.
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Campus & Community
Phi Beta Kappa elects 88 seniors to chapter
Eighty-eight seniors from the class of 2005 were elected to the Harvard College chapter of Phi Beta Kappa (PBK), Alpha Iota of Massachusetts, on May 12. These students will be formally inducted into the chapter at a ceremony and dinner in June.
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Campus & Community
DEAS, physical sciences dean to step down in 2006
Venkatesh Narayanamurti has announced his intention to step down in June 2006 as dean of the Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences (DEAS) and dean for physical sciences in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) at Harvard University. Narayanamurti, the John A. and Elizabeth S. Armstrong Professor of Engineering and Applied Sciences, plans to…
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Campus & Community
Vice provost for research policy named
Provost Steven E. Hyman announced today (June 2) that John P. Huchra, Doyle Professor of Cosmology in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and senior astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, has been appointed to the newly created post of vice provost for research policy.
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Campus & Community
HSPH joins battle over America’s waistline
The Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) weighed in on the battle over America’s bulging middle Thursday (May 26), with a panel of health experts saying a government study showing…
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Health
Novel combination overcomes drug-resistant multiple myeloma cells
The researchers hope to move rapidly to clinical trials of the therapy, a combination of the drug Velcade and an experimental compound that was designed by researchers at the Broad…
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Campus & Community
Suicides are down, researchers say
The suicide rate among men and women ages 18 to 54 years fell 6 percent since 1990. In 1990-92, the rate was approximately 15 out of every 100,000 adults. It…
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Campus & Community
Planners chart options for Harvard in Allston
The planning firm Cooper, Robertson and Partners has prepared an interim report for the Harvard community that proposes preliminary ideas and options for a basic campus and urban framework in Allston.
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Health
CT significantly reduces the need for appendectomy
For the study, the researchers analyzed 663 patients who were examined on CT for suspected appendicitis. An appendectomy was performed on 268 of the CT-screened patients. Of these 268 patients,…
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Campus & Community
Tree huggers
The Arnold Arboretum’s program for preschoolers that serves the area Head Start brings very excited kids to a lovely, engaging and stimulating nature setting.
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Campus & Community
South Asia Initiative announces grant recipients
The South Asia Initiative (SAI) at the Asia Center has announced its first completed cycle of Das and Menezes Travel Grants to the Indian Subcontinent. Grants were awarded for research travel to Harvard faculty and graduate students from across all the Schools, and to undergraduates at the College.