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Science & TechSingle spinning nuclei in diamond offer a stable quantum computing building blockSurmounting several distinct hurdles to quantum computing, physicists at Harvard University have found that individual carbon-13 atoms in a diamond lattice can be manipulated with extraordinary precision to create stable quantum mechanical memory and a small quantum processor, also known as a quantum register, operating at room temperature. The finding brings the futuristic technology of… 
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Campus & Community‘Digital immigrants’ teaching ‘digital natives’Students coming into universities today are “digital natives” and fundamentally different in their use of technology than the “digital immigrants” who teach them, according to John Palfrey, executive director of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society. 
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HealthRed wine, taken in moderation, reduces risk of prostate cancerMen who drink moderate amounts of red wine are only half as likely to be diagnosed with prostate cancer as those who don’t drink it at all, according to a report in the June issue of Harvard Men’s Health Letter. What’s more, the beverage seems to be especially protective against the most advanced and aggressive… 
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HealthMajor progress toward cell reprogramming; researchers approach key goal of biologistsTwo Harvard Stem Cell Institute (HSCI) researchers and scientists at Whitehead Institute and Japan’s Kyoto University have independently taken major steps toward discovering ways to reprogram cells in order to direct their development – a key goal in developmental biology and regenerative medicine. 
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Campus & CommunityUniversity and HUCTW reach agreement on new contractThe University and the Harvard Union of Clerical and Technical workers (HUCTW) are have announced that they have reached agreement on the terms of a new three-year contract that includes wage and benefit changes; an emphasis on career development, education, and training for staff; and a renewed commitment to the labor-management partnership. The new contract,… 
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Campus & CommunityReunion classes give backReunion classes have contributed critical unrestricted funds for Harvard College and funded three professorships, two junior professorships, and some 15 scholarships. To date, four campaigns have exceeded $20 million, with a little less than a month remaining in the fundraising year. 
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Campus & CommunityPresident’s ReportTo the Members of the Board of Overseers, Ladies and Gentlemen, I have the honor to present my annual report for 2006-07. 
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Campus & CommunityThe year in reviewAs Commencement crowns another year of Harvard history, here is a brief backward glance at some of the year’s highlights. 
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Campus & CommunityPersonal glimpses into Harvard historySince its founding in 1636, Harvard has moved through many great historical dramas. History as a listing of events — as chronicle — has its uses, but often more insight is gained through personal accounts. Great events and small can often be better understood in the light of private recollections. 
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Campus & CommunityRhetors are revved up and ready to rollBefore long, Charles Joseph McNamara ’07 will be with Teach For America in a rural Mississippi high school. 
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Campus & CommunityEleven elevated to officerThe ROTC commissioning ceremony began in a quietly festive mood in the roped-off area around the statue of John Harvard that sits before University Hall. There, 11 young men and women of the graduating class of 2007 took their oaths privately for the service of their choice — Army, Navy, Air Force, or Marines —… 
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Campus & CommunityClinton lends class to Class DayIn his Class Day speech on Wednesday (June 6) Bill Clinton remarked that the great lesson he learned from the human genome project, which was brought to completion during his presidency, is that genetically all humans are 99.9 percent identical. 
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Campus & CommunityBe careful what you work forHarvard interim President Derek Bok bid the Harvard College Class of 2007 farewell Tuesday (June 5), urging graduating seniors to consider the true roots of happiness in life, and cautioning that while society values wealth, for most people money does not equal satisfaction. 
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Campus & CommunityPoetry, argument, ritual mark PBK ceremonyJust after 10 Tuesday morning (June 5), crowds of Harvard seniors in black cap and gown gathered outside Harvard Hall. Family and gowned faculty mixed in, and cameras were soon clicking portraits against backdrops of tree and lawn and brick. The rain held off. 
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Campus & CommunityAn exaltation of bells will ring out to celebrate Commencement DayA joyous peal of bells will ring throughout Cambridge today (June 7). In celebration of the City of Cambridge and of the country’s oldest university — and of our earlier history when bells of varying tones summoned us from sleep to prayer, work, or study — this ancient yet new sound will fill Harvard Square… 
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Campus & CommunityFour honored with the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences medalA pioneer in computer science, an anthropologist who has revised our view of primate behavior, a Renaissance scholar who served as Harvard’s 26th president, and an economist who has helped ailing nations recover economic health received the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Centennial Medal on Wednesday (June 6) at the Harvard Faculty Club.The medalists… 
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Campus & CommunityMichael D. Smith named next dean of the Faculty of Arts and SciencesMichael D. Smith, a distinguished computer scientist, admired teacher, and skilled administrative leader, will become the new Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences this July, President-elect Drew G. Faust announced today. 
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Campus & CommunityHonorary degrees awarded at Commencement’s Morning ExercisesSix men and three women received honorary degrees at this morning’s 356th Commencement Exercises. Biographical sketches of the honorands appear below. 
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Science & Tech‘Digital immigrants’ teaching ‘digital natives’Students coming into universities today are ‘digital natives’ and fundamentally different in their use of technology than the ‘digital immigrants’ who teach them, according to John Palfrey, executive director of… 
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HealthMajor progress toward cell reprogrammingTwo Harvard Stem Cell Institute (HSCI) researchers and scientists at Whitehead Institute and Japan’s Kyoto University have independently taken major steps toward discovering ways to reprogram cells in order to… 
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Campus & CommunityJason LukeYou might not know Jason Luke ’94, but you know his work. He’s associate director for custodial and support services at Harvard’s Facilities Maintenance Operations. That makes him the Commencement superintendent who every June transforms the campus into a well-oiled machine for merriment (and solemnity). 
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Campus & CommunityKate LoosianKate Loosian is a senior project manager with Harvard Real Estate Services, where she keeps an educated eye on building renovations at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. (She has a bachelor’s degree in architecture from the University of Notre Dame.) 
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Campus & Community‘Life classes’ teach local, global ways to go greenIn the offices of the Harvard Green Campus Initiative (HGCI), there is everything you would expect from that arm of University Operations Services: no-glue carpeting, energy-efficient lighting, high-tech windows, and sensors that adjust ventilation by measuring CO2. But in plain sight, next to one of the recycled cubicles, there is also a toilet. The bowl… 
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Campus & CommunityHarvard takes the LEED in green buildingsIf you could fly in a small plane over Harvard, looking down wouldn’t tell you much about the University’s sustainable buildings. 
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Campus & CommunityMichelle GrayMichelle Gray, who has had careers as a cooking teacher and social worker, is a customer service manager at Harvard’s Dunster-Mather combined kitchen operation. One day not long ago, she used a handheld clicker to count the number of people she talked to. The answer: almost 300. 
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Campus & CommunityNathan GauthierHe’s only 31, but Nathan Gauthier has had an adventurous life so far. He spent two years with the Peace Corps in Ecuador, studied red snapper in the Gulf of Mexico, shot underwater video for NASA, and worked as a fisheries biologist in Washington state and Hawaii. 
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Campus & CommunityMeghan DugganMeghan Duggan knows her way around sustainability. The marine engineer with a master’s degree in facilities management can talk easily about kilowatt hours, solar panels, cogeneration, renewable wood, and high-efficiency lights. 
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Campus & CommunityThe biggest challenge of sustainability: Changing mindsIn 1999, the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) made plans to move its offices to the Landmark Center, a converted Sears, Roebuck and Co. warehouse in Boston. Danny Beaudoin — the School’s manager of operations, energy, and utilities — was asked to look into sustainable design for the renovation: a realm of low-emitting paints,… 
 
							 
							 
							