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Campus & Community
College sets undergraduate tuition, fees
Harvard College has announced its fees for undergraduate tuition, room, and board for the 2004-2005 academic year. Tuition is set at $27,448. Overall charges will total $39,880, an increase of 5.15 percent, including room rate, $4,974 board, $4,286 health services fee, $1,264 and student services fee, $1,908.
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Campus & Community
In brief
OfA presents ‘An Evening with Suzanne Farrell’ As part of its Learning From Performers series, the Office for the Arts will welcome acclaimed ballerina Suzanne Farrell on April 15 at…
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Campus & Community
Newsmakers
Gerald Holton to deliver Tillich Lecture This year’s Paul Tillich lecture will be given by Mallinckrodt Research Professor of Physics and Research Professor of the History of Science Gerald Holton.…
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Campus & Community
Coordinated calendar recommended
In its report released Monday (March 22), the Harvard University Committee on Calendar Reform, appointed last fall by the president, provost, and deans, recommends that the University move to a limited framework of shared dates among all Schools to promote closer connections among faculty and students from across the University. The committee adopted its report…
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Campus & Community
Modern Greek Studies seeks submissions for conference
Harvards Modern Greek Studies Program invites graduate students in modern Greek studies or in related fields to participate in a grad student conference taking place in April 2005. The goal of the conference, titled The Cankered Muse: In Search of Modern Greek Satire, is to account for the prolific and uninterrupted presence of satire in…
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Campus & Community
Huntington Prize awarded to Eliot Cohen
Eliot A. Cohen was awarded the first Huntington Prize on Monday (March 22) for his book Supreme Command: Soldiers, Statesmen, and Leadership in Wartime (New York: Free Press, 2002).
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Campus & Community
The hard lessons of the Rwandan genocide discussed
International complicity and the lessons learned 10 years after the Rwandan genocide, in which almost a million people were slaughtered in eight weeks, was the topic of a compelling session at the Kennedy Schools John F. Kennedy Jr. Forum Tuesday night (March 23).
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Campus & Community
At the Divinity School, passionate talk of ‘The Passion of the Christ’
The Harvard Divinity School (HDS) faculty members and guests who gathered Thursday (March 18) to discuss the much-talked-about new film The Passion of the Christ dissented only in their choice of adjectives.
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Campus & Community
President holds office hours in April
President Lawrence H. Summers will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office on the following dates:
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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 March 20. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
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Campus & Community
Memorial services set for Kelleher, Shearman
Shearman memorial April 4 A memorial service for John K. G. Shearman will be held Sunday, April 4, at 2:30 p.m. in the Faculty Room in University Hall. A reception…
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Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
March 6, 1945 – The last spring term under the wartime trimester schedule begins. Final figures University-wide show an enrollment of 1,817 civilians, and 4,100 Army and Navy officer specialists.…
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Campus & Community
Faculty Council notes for March 24
At its 10th meeting of the year (March 24) the Faculty Council discussed the Report of the Harvard University Committee on Calendar Reform with the chair of the committee, Professor Sidney Verba (government).
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Campus & Community
Building bias
Kirkland House is reflected in Belfer Hall at the Kennedy School of Government. Undaunted by the illusion of a leaning tower of Belfer, a student opens the front door.
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Campus & Community
Drug limits spinal cord damage
A common antibiotic used to treat arthritis and acne shows promise for limiting the severity of spinal cord and brain injuries.
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Campus & Community
New ‘Nerve Center’ is formed
Harvard has long been recognized for its strength in neuroscience: Researchers in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) are leaders in studies of behavior, perception, and brain development, while Harvard Medical School (HMS) was the first in the nation to establish a department of neurobiology.
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Campus & Community
The nature of culture
In the freshman seminar Painting Natural History, Faith Imafidon 07 sketches a plant called Magic Bells. The seminar is held in the Carpenter Center.
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Campus & Community
Yo-Yo Ma to receive Arts Medal
Internationally acclaimed cellist Yo-Yo Ma will receive the 10th annual Harvard Arts Medal on May 9.
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Campus & Community
Kids more involved in politics
Young adults are substantially more involved in the 2004 presidential race than they were in the 2000 race. If the trend continues, higher turnout in November is nearly a certainty, according to the Shorenstein Centers Vanishing Voter Project.
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Campus & Community
HASI helps ‘reboot’ lab for high-schoolers
Thien Phan, Marcos Posada, and Columbia Nunez, computer whizzes with the Brighton High School PowerUP Computer Center after-school program, enjoy their new and improved computer lab. The new rebooted center, dedicated yesterday, was made possible through a partnership with the City of Boston, the Allston Brighton Community Development Corporation (ABCDC), with funding from the Harvard…
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Campus & Community
Looking at Germany, Japan, Iraq: A tale of three occupations
Soon after the Bush administration revealed its plan to overthrow Saddam Hussein and bring democracy to Iraq, commentators began comparing this initiative with Americas occupation of Germany and Japan following World War II. Depending on ones perspective, these comparisons could be positive (Weve done it before and we can do it again) or negative (The…
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Campus & Community
1,000 HLS students will help monitor 2004 election
In an effort to prevent the confusion and mistakes that marked the 2000 election, a group of Harvard Law School students has launched a project to ensure that 2004 presidential election voters are given proper access to the ballot. The new group, Just Democracy, plans to recruit and place more than 1,000 law students with…
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Campus & Community
Gene responsible for blood supply found
Researchers at Harvard-affiliated Dana-Farber Cancer Institute have pinpointed a crucial gene on which the normal development of the bodys entire blood system depends. If the gene is absent, even the most basic blood stem cells cannot be generated. In a mutated form, this gene can cause a rare and devastating form of leukemia.
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Campus & Community
Crimson clicking in ECAC’s
The Harvard mens and womens hockey teams both managed impressive series sweeps in ECAC quarterfinal action this past Saturday (March 13), albeit in dramatically different ways. It took the Crimson men a come-from-behind win in overtime to dismiss favored host Brown, 3-2, in the teams second match-up (Harvard took the first, 4-2, on March 12),…
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Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
March 3, 1906 – The “Harvard University Gazette” (not yet in tabloid format) registers for second-class mailings at the Boston Post Office. March 1952 – The Harvard Corporation votes to…
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Campus & Community
The great debate
The strained relationship between the United States and the United Nations has often dominated headlines. The U.S., as the worlds most powerful nation, is the international peacekeeping bodys biggest supporter and its largest detractor – a riddle that has long puzzled politicians, journalists, academics, and the general public.
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Campus & Community
Seven are named Soros Fellows
Seven Harvard-related students are among the 30 recipients of this years Paul and Daisy Soros New American Fellowship. Recipients receive up to a $20,000 stipend plus half-tuition for as many as two years of graduate study at any institution of higher learning in the United States.
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Campus & Community
Educator takes tough look at conservatives progressives
Would-be reformers of Americas urban schools are hamstrung by a rigid dogmatism that pits progressive against conservative, parent against teacher, and academic against politician, Duke Universitys Charles Payne told an audience at the Harvard Graduate School of Education (GSE) Monday night (March 15). In a lecture called A Curse on Both Their Houses: Liberal and…
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Campus & Community
HLS Library unveils online portrait collection
The Harvard Law School Library has announced the opening of a new exhibition titled The Legal Portrait Project Online. The exhibition is the culmination of an 18-month project to catalog, digitize, and make available the Law Schools 4,000-item portrait collection of lawyers, jurists, and legal thinkers dating from the Middle Ages to the late 20th…
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Campus & Community
HLS students hear case before high court does
Harvard Law School, long a training ground for many of the nations sharpest legal minds, last week (March 9) coached some seasoned lawyers preparing a case thats on its way to the U.S. Supreme Court later this month. For the members of the legal defense team arguing the case, the moot court provided a realistic…