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Campus & Community
Stephen G. Breyer, associate justice of U.S. Supreme Court, is speaker
Stephen G. Breyer, associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, will deliver this years Tanner Lectures on Human Values Nov. 17, 18, and 19.
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Campus & Community
Film, talks reprise feats of great modern composer
Elliott Carter has been called the worlds greatest living composer. It is no slight to Carters artistic achievement to note that this distinction is in part due to his remarkable longevity. At age 95, the two-time Pulitzer Prize winner is not only healthy and active but still composing orchestral music of outstanding brilliance.
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Campus & Community
‘Go Cold Turkey’ to reduce energy use
Members of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) and Harvards Longwood campus have a chance to make a dent in global climate change and air pollution by going cold turkey with their on-campus energy use over Thanksgiving weekend. By participating in Go Cold Turkey 2004, students, staff, and faculty at FAS, Harvard Medical School,…
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Campus & Community
Arts center breaks ground in Watertown
At the Nov. 9 groundbreaking for the new Arsenal Center for the Arts, John Airasian (left), co-chair of the capital campaign for the Arsenal Center for the Arts, presents Jim Gray from Harvard Planning and Real Estate with a $1 bill, the cost of Harvards 99-year lease of the property to Watertown, part of an…
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Campus & Community
Kohlberg is named chief technology development officer
Harvard has named Isaac T. Kohlberg associate provost and chief technology development officer to oversee the development of new technologies based on discoveries made at Harvard.
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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 Nov. 8. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
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Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
Nov. 7, 1898 – “The Harvard Bulletin” (predecessor of “Harvard Magazine”) publishes its first (four-page) issue. Cost: 8 cents. Nov. 10, 1903 – In the now-demolished Rogers Building (or Old…
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Campus & Community
Faculty Council meeting Nov. 10
At its fourth meeting of the year (Nov. 10) the Faculty Council met with members of the FAS Standing Committee on Women to discuss the recruitment of women to the Faculty. Committee members present for this discussion included Professors Marjorie Garber (English and VES), Drew Faust (history), Susan Pharr (government), and Ann Rowland (English). Nina…
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Campus & Community
An egg full of singing puppets
If youve walked or driven along Quincy Street recently, you might have noticed something strange lurking beneath the Carpenter Center – something huge and vaguely oval-shaped, gleaming white but starting to acquire a patina of bright green.
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Campus & Community
Appointees mark new integrate health approach
As Harvards director of University Counseling, Academic Support, Mental Health, and Alcohol & Substance Abuse Services since May 2004, Paul Barreira has a very full plate.
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Science & Tech
Taking a CAT scan of the early universe
Reporting in the Nov. 11, 2004, issue of Nature, astrophysicists J. Stuart B. Wyithe (University of Melbourne) and Abraham Loeb (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics) have calculated the size of cosmic…
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Campus & Community
Early museum re-created in Science Center installation
The Danish professor of medicine Ole Worm (1588-1654) believed, as did his more enlightened contemporaries, that learning comes about through the observation of nature – through empiricism and experiment – and not just through the study of texts. Worm firmly believed that vision was the most trustworthy sense for natural history investigations.
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Campus & Community
Research and recreation coexist at Arnold Arboretum
Its a stunning late-October day in Bostons Jamaica Plain neighborhood, and the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University is putting on a show. Alive with walkers, joggers, cyclists, and pups straining at leashes, even on a weekday, the Arboretum dazzles visitors with an explosion of fiery foliage and a myriad of scenic vistas that showcase the…
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Campus & Community
Five professors named 2004 AAAS Fellows
The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) – the worlds largest general scientific society and publisher of the journal Science – has awarded five Harvard professors the distinction of AAAS fellow. Election as a fellow is an honor bestowed on society members by their peers.
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Campus & Community
Ruth Sager
Ruth Sager should be remembered above all as a gifted, original and imaginative scientist who loved her life of exploring nature and in her later years brought her gifts and passion to investigating the scourge of breast cancer.
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Campus & Community
HEMS will perform ‘first great opera’
In 1607, about a year after Shakespeares Macbeth premiered in London, poet Alessandro Striggio and composer Claudio Monteverdi presented a new play at the court of Mantua in Italy.
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Campus & Community
Hay directs Pulitzer Prize-winning ‘Proof’
Harvard Law School (HLS) will kick off four performances of David Auburns Pulitzer Prize-winning play Proof on Friday (Nov. 5). Professor of Law Bruce Hay will direct a cast of four in the play that tells the story of a young woman who drops out of school to care for her father, a once-brilliant mathematician…
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Campus & Community
Death comes to the Peabody
At the Dia de los Muertos performance at the Peabody Museum on Nov. 2, Ciria Gomez plays the part of Death with a frightening plausibility.
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Campus & Community
Looking toward universal primary education
Among the most ambitious of the eight ambitious goals adopted at the United Nations Millennium Summit was the establishment of universal primary education for all children by 2015. The initiative currently has the support of 182 countries, yet its implementation faces numerous obstacles, particularly in developing countries.
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Campus & Community
College aid reforms needed to encourage students
In the keynote speech to the annual College Board Forum in Chicago on Monday (Nov. 1), Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers issued a call to action to educational leaders to help restore education to its proper role as a pathway to equal opportunity and excellence in our society.
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Campus & Community
Lightfoot talks to local educators
HGSEs Fisher Professor Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot speaks with Cambridge school leaders and city officials about her research, which investigates the culture of schools, socialization within families and communities, and the relationship between culture and learning styles. The seminar was hosted by the Office of Community Affairs and took place at the Faculty Club.
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Campus & Community
HSPH receives NIH ‘Roadmap’ funding
The Interdisciplinary Training in Genetics and Complex Diseases at the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) program has received $2.2 million over the next five years as part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Roadmap for Medical Research. The new training program will focus on gene-environment interactions and complex diseases. Successful applicants to the…
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Campus & Community
Bonner points to still-powerful KGB
Two veterans of Russias human rights movement, Elena Bonner and Sergei Kovalev, visited Harvard Nov. 1. But despite all they have risked and suffered since their struggle began in the 1960s, neither was optimistic about the prospects for human rights in Russia today.
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Campus & Community
HCL presents collection to China’s Sun Yat-Sen University Library
Nancy M. Cline, the Roy E. Larsen Librarian of Harvard College, and Professor Cheng Huan-wen, director of Sun Yat-Sen University Library in Guangzhou, China, have signed a formal agreement to transfer a significant selection of Harvards Hilles Library collection to Sun Yat-Sen University in June 2005.
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Campus & Community
Sports in brief
Harvard sneaks by Big Green, 13-12 The Harvard defense denied a go-ahead two-point conversion with 2:15 remaining in the fourth quarter to slip past host Dartmouth, 13-12, this past Saturday…
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Campus & Community
Richard Holbrooke is ‘Great Negotiator’
Richard Holbrooke, the premier architect of the 1995 peace agreement that ended the war in Bosnia and a skillful negotiator credited with resolving the bitter dispute over dues owed in arrears by the United States to the United Nations, has won the 2004 Great Negotiator Award. The former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations received…
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Campus & Community
Research in brief
Study of cancer trials finds significant safety improvement The chance that patients participating in early-stage cancer research studies will die from the experimental treatments has dropped dramatically over the past…
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Campus & Community
Freedom squelches terrorist violence
A John F. Kennedy School of Government researcher has cast doubt on the widely held belief that terrorism stems from poverty, finding instead that terrorist violence is related to a nations level of political freedom.
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Campus & Community
In brief
Summer Urban Program (SUP) seeks directors The Phillips Brooks House Association (PBHA) is seeking to fill 12 SUP director positions. Located throughout Greater Boston and Cambridge, SUP consists of 11…
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Campus & Community
Newsmakers
Kalow to accept HMS community service award Bruce Kalow, a pediatrician at Broadway Health Center in Somerville, Mass., will receive a Dean’s Community Service Award from Harvard Medical School (HMS)…