All articles
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Campus & Community
HFA acquires Ukrainian film collection:
The new film conservation center will not only help the Harvard Film Archive care for films already in its possession it will also encourage those with valuable film collections to entrust them to the archives stewardship.
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Campus & Community
Joint Center for Housing names 2003-4 fellows
Seven leaders in community development and housing were recently appointed fellows to Harvards Joint Center for Housing Studies. The fellowship program offers leaders in the field of housing an opportunity to explore emerging research areas and to work closely with the centers research team. Fellowships are awarded for an academic year and in some cases…
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Campus & Community
CSWR to host 21 fellows at Divinity School:
The Center for the Study of World Religions (CSWR) at Harvard Divinity School (HDS) will host 21 fellows during the 2003-04 academic year. Established in 1958, CSWR fosters excellence in the study of world religions on the broadest scale and from many perspectives. International in composition and subject matter, CSWR facilitates the exchange of ideas…
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Campus & Community
Kennedys attend IOP rededication:
It was politics as not-quite-usual Friday afternoon (Sept. 19), as members of the Kennedy family joined Harvard faculty and students and other political dignitaries to rename the forum at Harvards John F. Kennedy School of Government (KSG) for John F. Kennedy Jr. The event, in celebration of the forums 25th anniversary, was a moving testament…
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Campus & Community
Law School holds first reunion for gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender graduates:
Harvard Law School held its first-ever reunion for gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender graduates last weekend, Sept. 19-20. The reunion commemorated the founding of the first gay student group at the School, the Committee on Gay Legal Issues, which was founded in October 1978. The event began with a reception Friday night (Sept. 19) at…
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Campus & Community
Harvard Neighbors to open its doors:
Harvard Neighbors will host an open house on Oct. 1 from 4 to 6 p.m. at Loeb House. Open to University faculty and staff (and their spouses or partners), Harvard Neighbors sponsors a range of educational and cultural events throughout the academic year. The Oct. 1 welcoming reception will highlight this falls schedule of events,…
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Campus & Community
Urban resuscitation:
Hundreds of years ago, Chinese architects designed a special city where the Ming emperors could rest on their way to visit their ancestral tombs.
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Campus & Community
HLS creates fund to combat discrimination:
The Law School (HLS) has announced the creation of a fund to support courses, seminars, research, and conferences on ways to combat discrimination and prejudice. The Sheldon Seevak/Facing History and Ourselves Fund, established with a $2 million gift from Sheldon Seevak, will be managed by the William Henry Bloomberg Professor of Law Martha Minow.
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Campus & Community
African language program launched:
The Department of African and African American Studies is launching a new African Language Program. Beginning this fall, undergraduate students can study Hausa and Swahili with two experts in the field of African language, as well as travel to Kenya, Niger, and Ghana for further study.
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Campus & Community
‘Who goes to college?’:
Without a glint of self-aggrandizement, Bridget Terry Long describes her work as grappling with the million-dollar question.
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Campus & Community
D. Ronald Daniel to conclude service as treasurer:
D. Ronald Daniel, M.B.A. 54, the Universitys treasurer and currently the longest-serving member of the Harvard Corporation, intends to conclude his service in those roles at the end of the 2003-04 academic year.
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Campus & Community
Ig Nobel Prizes will skewer silly science at Sanders
Nano-seminars, Murphys sons law, an opera about a scientist who falls in love with an oxygen atom, and the ever-popular Win-a-Date-With-a-Nobel-Laureate Contest, will take center stage at Sanders Theatre Oct. 2 during the annual Ig Nobel Prize ceremony.
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Campus & Community
Lions, tigers, and books…:
When Theodore Roosevelt left the presidency in 1909, he went on safari to British East Africa, toting gear, provisions, and a 60-pound aluminum carrying case full of his favorite books. The new exhibition in the Theodore Roosevelt Gallery, Pusey Library – Roosevelt Reading: The Pigskin Library – highlights this famed literary collection.
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Campus & Community
After nearly 30 years, Thomas Reardon concludes service:
Thomas M. Reardon, a driving force behind Harvards last two major fundraising campaigns, has announced his plans to step down this fall as the Universitys vice president for alumni affairs and development, while remaining active in fundraising matters as senior adviser for University development.
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Campus & Community
HMS launches new department to study systems biology:
The Medical School (HMS) made a significant commitment to the emerging field of systems biology in the creation of the Department of Systems Biology (DSB), one of the first department-level systems biology programs in the nation. The announcement was made Sept. 23.
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Campus & Community
President of Royal Society to speak at Science Center:
Lord Robert May, current president of the venerable British scientific institution the Royal Society will be speaking at the Science Center on Oct. 6 at 4 p.m.
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Campus & Community
Huge game, big week:
After orchestrating Harvards impressive 43-23 season-opening victory over Holy Cross this past weekend, Crimson quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick 05 has been named the Ivy Leagues first offensive player of the week. Fitzpatrick set a single-game school record for total offense with a 471-yard performance, completing 20 of 27 passes for 359 yards, while rushing for 112…
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Campus & Community
The ties that matter:
Given the precarious state of the mens soccer teams net-minding these days – what with all three of Harvards goalies nursing (and playing through) injuries – the 2-2 double-overtime draw against visiting Fairfield (2-2-2) on Sept. 17 starts to feel like not such a bad thing. Factor in the sheer duration (110 minutes) and physical…
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Campus & Community
IOP forum casts light on future of Korea:
The title of the Institute of Politics Sept. 23 forum discussion Will the Korean Nuclear Crisis Lead to War? promised to throw light on a subject that has kept much of the world in a state of anxiety ever since it was revealed in October 2002 that North Korea had resumed its nuclear weapons program…
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Campus & Community
Beyond ‘Bowling Alone’:
In a national landscape of increasingly sparse clubs, leagues, and societies, Americans are still coming together, fighting for a cause, a job, or an education through hands-on, face-to-face organizations that are hopeful exmples that, if followed, could help reweave the fabric of American society.
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Campus & Community
Memorial service:
A memorial service for John Shearman, Adams University Professor Emeritus, will be held Nov. 3 at 11 a.m. at the Memorial Church.
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Campus & Community
Police reports
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Sept. 20. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
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Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
Sept. 1, 1922 – The Divinity School and the Andover Theological Seminary formally begin a closer affiliation under a new agreement approved in the spring. Sept. 28, 1925 – In…
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Campus & Community
Calendar reform at Harvard:
Sept. 25, 2003 For decades, disparities among the calendars of Harvard’s faculties and Schools have made it more difficult than it should be for students in one School to cross-register…
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Campus & Community
Harvard wows Working Mother:
Harvard University is one of the nations 100 best places to work if youre a mom, Working Mother magazine announced Sept. 23 in its annual 100 Best Companies for Working Mothers issue. It is the only university on the 2003 list and just the third university honored in the 18-year history of the 100 Best…
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Science & Tech
Who goes to college?
According to the College Board, people with a bachelor’s degree will earn, on average, $1 million more throughout their lifetimes than those with only a high school diploma. Yet with…
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Science & Tech
Blue light special
Jet-setters and shift workers now sit in front of glaring white lights to readjust their body rhythms and avoid sleep and alertness problems. New experiments condcuted by Harvard University researchers…
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Campus & Community
Christopher advises HLS students:
Its possible – although not necessarily easy – to combine a legal career with one in public service, former Secretary of State Warren Christopher told Harvard Law School (HLS) students Sept. 5. Touching upon some of the defining moments of his long career in community, state, and national service, Christopher demonstrated that blending the two…
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Campus & Community
Center for Ethics and Professions selects fellows
The University Center for Ethics and the Professions has selected five Edmond J. Safra Graduate Fellows in Ethics for the 2003-04 academic year. The graduate fellows, who study ethical problems in law, political science, and philosophy, were chosen from an outstanding pool of Harvard graduate students who are writing dissertations or engaged in major research…