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Campus & Community
HSPH names Donnelly distinguished alum
The Department of Biostatistics at the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) has named Christl A. Donnelly of the Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Imperial College London, the recipient of its 2005 Distinguished Alum Award. Donnelly will deliver a lecture June 1 at Harvard.
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Campus & Community
Down and in
After clawing their way back for a pair of impressive single-run victories against visiting Dartmouth on Sunday (May 1), the Harvard baseball team didnt fool around much when the four-game series resumed on Monday (May 2) in Hanover, N.H. Actually, the Crimson clamped down just long enough to lock up the first game of Mondays…
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Campus & Community
‘Barry’s Corner’ in Allston gets greener
Seventy-five trees have just been planted along North Harvard Street in an effort to improve the look and feel around Harvard property in Allston. Located at 175 to 210 North Harvard Street (in the area traditionally referred to as Barrys Corner) and at Brighton Mills Shopping Center, the trees, shrubs, and other landscape improvements are…
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Campus & Community
Springfest – with umbrellas – comes off without a hitch
While some students were taking a wild ride on the Whirly Bird and others were facing off in gladiatorial bouts, and still others rocked and bopped to the sound of Blanks, they all shared one thing: They were wet. At first, just intermittently wet, then as annual Springfest partied on, pretty darn wet, then in…
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Campus & Community
AAPSS honor three Harvard affiliates
The American Academy of Political and Social Science (AAPSS) recognized its latest group of fellows at a ceremony held in Washington, D.C., on April 10. Robert Putnam, Peter and Isabel Malkin Professor of Public Policy, was among the group of five fellows.
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Campus & Community
Inside lookin’ out
While waiting to take a tour, 8-year-old Brian Mareau of Salem, N.H., peers out the door of the Harvard Museum of Natural History at the rain coming down.
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Campus & Community
Is environmentalism dead?
Authors of a controversial paper calling for the death of modern environmentalism to make way for a movement better able to handle the dramatic, global problems facing the world defended their ideas Tuesday (May 3) in an event at the John F. Kennedy School of Government.
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Campus & Community
Ten undergrads selected to be CollegeCorps interns
CollegeCorps, a nonprofit organization founded by Hani N. Elias 05 and Adam Kalamchi 05, recently announced that 14 Boston-area undergraduates have been selected to participate in the CollegeCorps Intern program. These students, who will be traveling to Bolivia, Ecuador, India, Mexico, Nicaragua, Peru, South Africa, or Uganda, represent the second class of interns under the…
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Campus & Community
Regional growth patterns addressed
Sun, skills, and sprawl are the three factors that largely determine regional growth patterns, Professor of Economics Edward L. Glaeser told local, state, and federal officials on April 27 at a conference organized by the Kennedy Schools Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston.
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Campus & Community
Grad student entrepreneurs win green business prize
Comic book fans looking for a good-hearted Green Goblin may want to consider the humble, the tiny, but the very powerful microbe. While lacking the menacing laugh and standard suite of pyrotechnic gadgets, these ubiquitous life forms (1 gram of soil holds more of them than there are human beings) are set to play the…
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Campus & Community
Arts to take center stage in campuswide fair
Bustling Harvard Square will resemble one giant stage for three days beginning May 5 during the annual Arts First Performance Fair. Sponsored by Harvard Office for the Arts (OfA), the annual fair celebrates students and faculty in the arts through more than 225 music, theater, dance, film, and visual arts events – most of them…
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Campus & Community
Sports in brief
Radcliffe crew captures Allen-DeWolfe Trophy In its final dual of the season, Radcliffe heavyweight crew bettered BU and MIT on the Charles to retain the Allen-DeWolfe Trophy. The Black and…
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Campus & Community
Newsmakers
Law and Society Association honors Sally Falk Moore The Law and Society Association recently awarded its Harry Kalven Prize for 2005 to Sally Falk Moore, the Victor S. Thomas Professor…
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Campus & Community
Massacre in Jedwabne re-examined at CES
Most people in the United States would be hard pressed to find the town of Jedwabne on a map, much less identify anything that happened there.
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Campus & Community
Kennedy School to receive $15 million gift
At a time when the collaboration of business, government, and civil society has never been more critical for the success of nations and for achieving great public objectives, the John F. Kennedy School of Government has announced a $15 million agreement to endow the work at the Schools Center for Business and Government.
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Campus & Community
Child-care scholarships, adoption help available
Applications for Harvards child-care scholarships for faculty, administrative and professional staff, and nonbargaining-unit support staff will be accepted until May 27. This program provides financial assistance for child care for children up to kindergarten age, and eligible after-school care for children of kindergarten age and older. Applications may be downloaded at http://harvie.harvard.edu/workandlife/children/scholarship.shtml#apsf.
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Campus & Community
Study bake
Students intermittently take in the sun and their studies in the Yard during one of the brief spurts of spring sunshine. Despite recent soggy conditions, Springfest pressed on as will Arts First this weekend.
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Campus & Community
Two Kennedy School alumni appointed to School
John Haigh M.P.P. 82 has been appointed executive dean at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG). Haigh previously served as senior vice president at Cingular/AT&T Wireless. While a student at KSG, Haigh focused on environmental policies, and following graduation, went on to work in the Schools Energy and Environment Policy Center. As executive dean, Haigh…
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Campus & Community
Initiative to support cultural activities announced
President Lawrence H. Summers and Provost Steven E. Hyman have announced the launch of a new initiative to support artistic and cultural activities at Harvard University. Sean T. Buffington, currently assistant provost and deputy chief of staff, will become associate provost and director of cultural programs, effective July 1. An advisory committee will be convened…
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Campus & Community
Skiotis memorial service May 6
A memorial service for Dennis N. Skiotis, director of undergraduate studies at Harvards Department of History from 1985 to 1998, and associate director of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies from 1976 to 1985, will be held May 6 from 3 to 5 p.m. at Adams House, 26 Plympton St. Skiotis passed away Oct. 19…
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Campus & Community
President holds May office hours
President Lawrence H. Summers will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office on:
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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 May 2. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
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Campus & Community
Special notice regarding Commencement Exercises
Morning Exercises To accommodate the increasing number of those wishing to attend Harvard’s Commencement Exercises, the following guidelines are proposed to facilitate admission into Tercentenary Theatre on Commencement Morning: Degree…
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Campus & Community
Soyinka feted by fellow Nobel Prize winners
When Wole Soyinka, the first African writer to win the Nobel Prize in literature, turned 70, his native country of Nigeria celebrated his birthday with two solid weeks of festivities. Harvard could not fête the 1986 Nobel Prize winner in quite the same way, but it managed something equally impressive – a feast of words…
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Campus & Community
Vitamin B6 fights cancer
Vitamin B6 is involved in approximately 100 reactions in the body, including protein and red blood cell metabolism. The nervous and immune systems also need it to function efficiently. In…
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Campus & Community
Zaldarriaga probes universe’s start
Matias Zaldarriaga is peering back into time to find his roots – and the roots of everything else ever created. Zaldarriaga, named professor of astronomy in July, is an expert…
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Campus & Community
Researchers induce heart cells to proliferate
In the best-documented effort to date, researchers from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at Children’s Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical School have successfully induced adult heart-muscle cells to divide and…
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Campus & Community
Drops in drops hold practical promise
A team of Harvard researchers has developed a technique that allows the precise formation of double emulsions – droplets within droplets – that offers new ways to deliver drugs, nutrients,…
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Campus & Community
Pigeons saved by rump feathers
Alberto Palleroni was a pigeon-napper. At night he haunted silos and other roosting places, snatching hundreds of startled birds. Then, he and his friends would change their feathers. By carefully…