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HealthHow Earth was wateredEvidence is mounting that Earth’s water arrived during formation, aboard meteorites and small bodies called “planetesimals.”  
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Arts & CultureFilm as a forceThree documentary filmmakers up for an Academy Award this Sunday all have ties to Harvard’s Department of Visual and Environmental Studies, a longstanding, multidisciplinary program with a strong commitment to nonfiction film.  
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Nation & WorldCopyright meets InternetUniversities are working to establish pathways to use open-access materials in online learning.  
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Arts & CultureDots on the borderlineArtist David Taylor’s most recent work is a series of photographs that capture images of the monuments that mark the United States’ border with Mexico, as well as some of the people and activities he encountered in his work. “Working the Line” on display at the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies.  
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Campus & CommunityFinal touchesThe Office for the Arts’ 15,010-square-foot ceramics studio was dedicated on Wednesday, with Harvard President Drew Faust addressing a large crowd at the Allston facility.  
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Campus & CommunityFaculty Council meeting held Feb. 26On Feb. 26 the members of the Faculty Council approved a proposal to change the name of the undergraduate concentration organismic and evolutionary biology to integrative biology. They also heard a report from the Committee to Study the Faculty Council Election Procedures and a presentation on the University’s financial context. 
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Nation & WorldFiscal fallout at the VaticanGregg Fields, a business journalist and research fellow who studies institutional corruption at the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, talked about the sweeping new financial reforms initiated by Pope Francis.  
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Science & TechHeads for steelIn the Instructional Physics/SEAS Instrument Lab, a machine shop tucked in the basement of Lyman Laboratory, students learn to use a range of equipment — everything from lathes to laser cutters to 3-D printers.  
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Arts & CultureChronicler of povertyBearing the lessons that long-term, immersive reporting can teach, journalist Katherine Boo, who writes about poverty, spent a week at Harvard’s Graduate School of Design as a senior Loeb Fellow.  
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Campus & CommunityA transformative TV roleTransgender actress Laverne Cox visited campus to discuss her breakout role on the acclaimed Netflix series “Orange Is the New Black.”  
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Science & TechNegative plusLed by Professor David Liu, a team of researchers has developed a technique to continuously evolve biomolecules that uses negative selection — the ability to drive evolution away from certain traits — to create molecules with dramatically altered properties.  
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Campus & CommunityTiny stages, grand creativityThe Harvard Theatre Collection is among the oldest and largest of its kind in the world. Within the climate-controlled subterranean reaches of Houghton Library are shelves, drawers, and boxes full of theater, dance, movie, and music items.  
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Science & TechSizing up the Big BangFour experts, including Nobel Prize winner Robert Wilson, came together for a CfA program titled “50 Years After the Discovery of the Big Bang.”  
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Nation & WorldHandmade horrorsA new study has documented “slavelike” conditions in India’s handmade carpet industry, the largest single source of carpets sold in some of the most well-known U.S. retailers.  
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Arts & CultureCool with a capital CHip-hop star and actor LL Cool J came to Harvard over the weekend, pulling double duty as host of the Cultural Rhythms festival and the Harvard Foundation’s Artist of the Year.  
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Campus & CommunityWrestling with choicesDavid Otunga, who addressed the HLS Committee on Sports and Entertainment Law, bills himself as unique — the only Harvard lawyer, movie star, professional wrestler, reality star, bodybuilder, and TV personality in the world. He also brought some very sage advice on Friday.  
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Science & TechOut of disaster, a new designA team of students from Harvard’s Graduate School of Design, just back from Japan, took home first prize in an international competition for solutions to sustainable recovery in a region of Japan devastated by a triple disaster in 2011.  
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Campus & CommunityWomen’s basketball drops 63-50 decision to PennDespite 18 points from senior captain Christine Clark, Harvard women’s basketball (17-6, 7-2) had a 21-game home winning streak halted against Penn, 63-50, Friday night at Lavietes Pavilion.  
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Campus & CommunityA hello in the snowInterim College Dean Donald H. Pfister touched base with students on a Harvard shuttle bus this week.  
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Nation & WorldGaming the political arenaJournalist Ken Shulman talks about the ways in which global sporting events are used to advance political agendas and how activists can leverage sports to draw attention and action to human-rights issues.  
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Arts & CultureA musical is born, slowlyAn experience in Uganda helping orphans get schooling is at the heart of “Witness Uganda,” a new production directed by Diane Paulus at the American Repertory Theater.  
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Nation & WorldConfrontation in UkraineSerhii Plokhii, an authority on Ukrainian history and director of Harvard’s Ukrainian Research Institute, explains what’s behind the violence and what’s at stake for a country that’s caught in a tug-of-war between Europe and Russia.  
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Campus & CommunityKenneth Griffin makes largest gift in Harvard College historyHarvard University announced today that alumnus Kenneth Griffin, A.B. ’89, founder and chief executive officer of Citadel, has made the largest gift in Harvard College history. The $150 million gift is principally focused on supporting Harvard’s financial aid program.  
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HealthLessening liver damageHarvard stem cell scientists studying the effect of nitric oxide on liver growth and regeneration appear to have serendipitously discovered a markedly improved treatment for liver damage caused by acetaminophen toxicity.  
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Arts & CultureBach to BachJoint exhibitions at Houghton Library and Loeb Music Library mark the 300th anniversary of composer C.P.E. Bach’s birth and the first publication of his complete works, as well as discoveries and acquisitions that were made along the way.  
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Arts & CultureBig skies, dusty trails“Fortunes of the Western,” a new series at the Harvard Film Archive, draws back the curtain on the golden age of Westerns following World War II. The series continues through March 22.  
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Campus & CommunityA museum as school labHundreds of Cambridge sixth-graders swarmed the Harvard Museum of Natural History for a look at prehistoric New England.  
 
							 
							 
							

