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Campus & Community
MAC gets into shape
In addition to a number of other improvements, renovations currently being completed at the Malkin Athletic Center include enclosure of the north mezzanine to provide additional areas for cardiovascular equipment. Al LeBlanc (left) and Sal Fazio of Fazio Construction in Malden work on the ceiling of this area.
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Campus & Community
Newsmakers
CHA elects new chair, vice chair Cambridge Health Alliance (CHA) recently announced that Francis H. Duehay, community leader, educator, and former elected official, has been elected to chair CHA’s board…
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Campus & Community
Appointments
Kathleen McCartney named academic dean Professor of Education Kathleen McCartney began serving as academic dean McCartney of the Graduate School of Education on July 1. An early-childhood education expert, McCartney…
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Campus & Community
Police reports
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the weeks beginning Aug. 25 and ending Sept. 13. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
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Campus & Community
Memorial services
Evon Z. Vogt memorial service to be held at Memorial Church A memorial service for Evon Z. Vogt, professor of social anthropology, emeritus, will be held Friday (Sept. 17) at…
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Campus & Community
HUPD puts ‘Playing It Safe’ on Web site
The Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) is committed to assisting all members of the Harvard community in providing for their own safety and security. Harvards annual security report, prepared in compliance with The Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act (the Clery Act), is titled Playing It Safe, and can…
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Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
Sept. 19, 1639 – Accused of neglecting and physically mistreating students, Nathaniel Eaton is fined and discharged as Master of the College by the Great and General Court of Massachusetts…
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Campus & Community
Interfaculty initiative aims to heal U.S. health care
Theres an industry in the United States where costs are skyrocketing and quality is slipping dangerously. Despite astonishing technological advances, customers are generally dissatisfied and the workforce is grumbling louder than ever. The product is unavailable to a growing segment of Americans, and those who can access it must often wait up to six months…
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Campus & Community
Helping hand given to promising local students
It was quiet in Boylston Halls Ticknor Lounge one early August afternoon. But the silence masked the concentration of 30 academically talented, financially disadvantaged Boston and Cambridge youths as they imagined their futures – and plotted their paths to get there.
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Campus & Community
Quantum network to deliver secure messages
Talked about for decades, a quantum code key system joined to the Internet has now been demonstrated. It sends encoding and decoding keys as light pulses between Harvard and Boston…
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Health
The tale of the tail
Sharks’ tails have always mystified biologists. Their relatives, hundreds of different species of fish, happily push themselves through the water with symmetrical tails that move from side to side. But…
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Science & Tech
Galactic collision reveals fate of Milky Way galaxy
Sixty-eight million light-years away, the Antennae galaxies are locked in a dance of death, with stars being ripped from their orbits and spiral arms being shredded into streamers that dangle…
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Health
Study finds leptin plays a key role in women’s health
Senior author Christos Mantzoros, M.D., director of the Human Nutrition Research Unit and clinical research overseer of the Department of Endocrinology at BIDMC and associate professor of medicine at Harvard…
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Science & Tech
The inside scoop on the Apostle Paul
Laura Nasrallah’s newest book, “An Ecstasy of Folly: Prophecy and Authority in Early Christianity,” argues that, in early Christian communities, dreams, visions, and prophecies were often central to communication and…
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Science & Tech
China’s one-child policy comes of age
When the Chinese government dictated that families limit themselves to one child each, it was a huge change: Chinese women averaged six births a piece in 1970, and parents traditionally…
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Campus & Community
Foreign policy future discussed
The familiar challenge of international terrorism will be central to the next president’s foreign policy agenda, but a panel of Harvard experts said that agenda will also include restoring America’s image abroad, a renewed focus on nuclear stockpile security, and relations with emerging superpower China.
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Campus & Community
On eve of Democratic National Convention, news anchors gather at KSG to discuss media and politics
A politically polarized nation and corporate concerns have applied increasing pressure on the nation’s major news broadcasters, top anchors told an audience at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG) Sunday (July 25), but they are resisting such pressures and perhaps doing their jobs better in the process.
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Campus & Community
Day-care exposure may reduce Hodgkin’s disease incidence
Young adults who attended day care or nursery school when they were children were more than a third less likely to develop Hodgkin’s disease, according to a new study by Harvard School of Public Health researchers.
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Campus & Community
‘You Talk It, We Live It!’
For the second summer in a row, Youth Opportunity Boston’s talented membership has published the YO Journal. This year’s colorful issue is jampacked with photos, articles, and opinion pieces straight from the ‘hood. The topic for the fall 2004 issue is, appropriately enough, politics.
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Campus & Community
‘Adaptation’ screening: Author Susan Orlean discusses fact, fiction, and movies
If ever a book-based film inspired questions of the original author, it is ‘Adaptation,’ the sideways interpretation of Susan Orlean’s 1998 nonfiction book ‘The Orchid Thief.’ Unlike most movies drawn from literature, in which the original author and often even the story itself disappear in a Hollywood haze, ‘Adaptation’ puts Orlean’s book – and Orlean…
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Campus & Community
Programs foster interest in medicine and life sciences
Nearly 150 area high school students participating in summer science programs gathered today (July 23) at the Longwood Medical Area for Boston’s ‘other convention.’
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Campus & Community
Taking a closer look at the obvious
Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan (Maha for short) studies the obvious but ignored – how do flags flutter, worms wiggle, fabrics fold. ‘There’s a certain joy in trying to discover the sublime in the mundane,’ says the Gordon McKay Professor of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics at Harvard University.
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Campus & Community
GSE’s Pollock explores ‘colormuteness’ in American education
When it comes to people, programs, and policies in education, Mica Pollock thinks we should talk about race more. And sometimes less. But mostly, Pollock, assistant professor of education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education (GSE), believes Americans need to learn to talk about racial issues in education better than we do.
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Campus & Community
Surprising variations discovered in human genomes
Contrary to expectations, a startling number of large variations have been found in the human genome. The genetic blueprints for humans were thought to be 99.9 percent similar, but researchers at Harvard Medical School and the University of Toronto in Canada have accidentally discovered large chunks of missing or added DNA in normal, healthy people.
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Campus & Community
A new comfort zone? Fewer women keeping names on marriage
Fewer college-educated women are keeping their maiden names at the altar, according to a Harvard study.
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Campus & Community
New research explains lag in onset of type of vertigo
Scientists may have pinpointed a microscopic reason why people suffering from the most common type of vertigo experience a distinct time lag between a rapid head motion and the onset of dizziness. The explanation, the researchers say, could be that it takes five to six seconds for minuscule crystals in the inner ear to sediment…
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Campus & Community
In brief
HLS chooses architect for northwest corner Harvard Law School (HLS) recently announced the selection of Robert A.M. Stern Architects as the principal design firm to prepare a planning framework for…
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Campus & Community
Newsmakers
Farrar to take helm of Harvard water polo Longtime collegiate water polo coach Erik Farrar will take the reins of Harvard’s men’s and women’s programs, it was announced earlier this…
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Campus & Community
Obituary: Paul A. Zizzo, 58
Paul A. Zizzo of Arlington, Mass., benefits manager for Harvard University, died on Aug. 15 of complications from back surgery. He was 58.
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Campus & Community
Sports briefs
Harvard athletes strut stuff in Athens Harvard graduate Brenda Taylor ’01 placed seventh in a field of eight in the women’s 400m hurdles on Wednesday evening (Aug. 25) in Athens.…