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  • Campus & Community

    Harvard students build bridges to development success stories:

    Around the world toil remarkable people whose unique skills and extraordinary enthusiasm put them at the center of difficult challenges. They bring people together who need to meet, create organizations where none existed, and are sometimes the lone force behind the search for solutions to daunting social problems.

  • Campus & Community

    Louder than words:

    Sylvio Castiglioni announced to a group of students that they would start off with the oldest game in the world: I do, you repeat. The 35 minutes that followed looked like the movement-based equivalent of a gospel choir face-off as the pack imitated Castiglioni, then alternate leaders, in a succession of lunges, squats, stomps, tumbles,…

  • Campus & Community

    Jantzen lands EIWA honor

    Jantzen lands EIWA honor

  • Campus & Community

    Professor presents hideous flip side of Western sublime :

    Alan Berger has been called the anti-Ansel Adams.

  • Campus & Community

    President and Provost set office hours

    President Lawrence H. Summers and Provost Steven Hyman will hold office hours for students in their Massachusetts Hall offices from 4 to 5 p.m. (unless otherwise noted) on the following dates:

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending Feb. 15. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    Feb. 27, 1971 – At Currier House, Radcliffe sponsors its first annual prelaw conference. February 1972 – Harvard purchases the 180-room Hotel Continental (Garden St. and Concord Ave., Cambridge) for…

  • Campus & Community

    Three street robberies reported near Quad

    Between Feb. 8 and 12, the Cambridge Police Department (CPD) filed three reports of street robbery occurring in the area of the Quadrangle. The first incident occurred on Feb. 8 at approximately 6:23 p.m. at 65 Martin St., when the suspect attacked the victim with a folding knife. The second incident occurred on Feb. 12…

  • Campus & Community

    Defensive maneuvers

    Lawyer Johnnie Cochran was part of the Saturday School Program at the Law School recently. The program was created in 1988 to give authors and activists an opportunity to present controversial works-in-progress to law students.

  • Campus & Community

    Let it stop! Let it stop! Let it stop!:

    A montage of photographs shot from the 10th floor of Holyoke Center. More snow photos, page 11.

  • Campus & Community

    New course links service to academics:

    Theres a well-worn refrain among Harvards most dedicated student volunteers and its legions of alumni who pursue careers as public service leaders: Phillips Brooks House Association was the best course I took at Harvard.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard Files Amicus Brief On the Consideration of Race in Admissions Decisions

    Harvard University, together with Yale University, Princeton University, Dartmouth College, Brown University, the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Chicago, and Duke University, has filed an amicus brief in the Michigan cases pending before the United States Supreme Court. The brief supports the right of institutions of higher education to consider race as one factor…

  • Campus & Community

    Sisterhood is powerful – and fun:

    It was a quiet, bright, snow-blanketed Saturday morning (Feb. 8), the kind that keeps most college students snug in warm beds until late. But inside Malkin Athletic Center, some of Harvards women athletes were already working up a sweat while awaiting the arrival of an important team – young girls from Allston-Brighton, East Boston, and…

  • Campus & Community

    Boys Choir of Harlem rocks the house :

    The audience at the Feb. 7 concert by the Boys Choir of Harlem never would have guessed that the performers were all suffering from fatigue if they hadnt been told so by the choirs founder and director, Walter J. Turnbull.

  • Campus & Community

    McLane wins reviewing award

    Reviewing books can be a thankless task. To do the job conscientiously requires many hours of attentive reading, perhaps additional hours of collateral research if one is not an expert on the subject, followed by an often agonizing session of massaging an unruly cluster of reactions into a cogent, accessible, and impossibly brief piece of…

  • Campus & Community

    O’Neill appointed director of communications and external relations for Allston Initiative:

    Jackie ONeill, who has spent nearly a decade as staff director in Massachusetts Hall, has been appointed director of communications and external relations for the Allston Initiative. She began her duties this week.

  • Campus & Community

    Having your cake and eating it, too:

    You always hear people say, If scientists can send men to the Moon, why cant they find a way for us to eat what we want and not get fat? And why cant they invent a pill that will extend our lives?

  • Campus & Community

    Center for Business and Government announces 2003 spring fellows

    Nine new fellows, including two Kennedy School of Government (KSG) alumni and members of the faculty of Tsinghua University in China, will join 23 returning and senior fellows at the Schools Center for Business and Government (CBG) this spring.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard vocarium picked for National Recording Registry

    Librarian of Congress James H. Billington has announced that the Harvard Vocarium is included in the first annual selection of 50 recordings that will be placed in the National Recording Registry.

  • Campus & Community

    Beyond terrorism’s front page news:

    Behind the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the war in Afghanistan, the worldwide manhunt for al Qaeda, and the looming war in Iraq lies a history of terrorism both broader and deeper than one gets from reading the front pages and listening to the news headlines.

  • Campus & Community

    Fellowship named for new filmmakers:

    An anonymous donor has established a new fellowship fund in the Film Study Center memorializing an artist whom many regard as the worlds greatest practitioner of aerial photography.

  • Campus & Community

    Schlesinger Library gets David papers:

    The Schlesinger Library of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study is acquiring the Elizabeth David papers. The foremost British food writer of her day and author of nine definitive books, David, who was born in 1913 and died in 1992, helped reawaken the postwar British palate while educating, through authentic recipes and compelling investigation, a…

  • Campus & Community

    Texts can be searched in original scripts:

    The Harvard University Library (HUL) has announced that researchers using HOLLIS – the Harvard Online Library Information System – can now search for Chinese, Japanese, and Korean materials in their original scripts. This new search feature is readily available to users whose desktops have been adapted for CJK scripts. It supplements and does not replace…

  • Campus & Community

    ‘Voices of Public Intellectuals’ speak up

    Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study launched its fifth annual Voices of Public Intellectuals lecture series Thursday night (Feb. 6) with the first of three explorations of women and the law. Linda Kerber, a professor at the University of Iowa and a current Radcliffe Fellow, spoke on the Asymmetry of Citizenship.

  • Campus & Community

    ‘Spiritual’ color featured in show on painter Delaney

    Beauford Delaney: The Color Yellow, an exhibit of 26 paintings by the African-American artist, will be on view from Feb. 15 through May 4 at Harvards Sert Gallery in the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts. From the portraits and cityscapes he did in New Yorks Greenwich Village in the 1940s, to the abstract work…

  • Campus & Community

    Medical School seeks nominations for Dean’s Award

    On behalf of Harvard Medical School (HMS) and the School of Dental Medicine, the Joint Committee on the Status of Women seeks nominations for two distinguished awards that support women faculty and staff.

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    CSWR summer grants available The Center for the Study of World Religions at Harvard Divinity School has announced that it is now accepting applications for its 2003 summer grants, which…

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Stauffer wins Lincoln Prize John Stauffer, associate professor of English and American civilization, was named a winner of Gettysburg College’s 13th annual Lincoln and E-Lincoln Prizes, given to the best…

  • Campus & Community

    W.E.B. DuBois Institute hosts Jamaica Kincaid and Andrea Lee:

    Authors Jamaica Kincaid and Andrea Lee 81 kicked the W.E.B. Du Bois Institutes Black Writers Reading series off to a rousing start Wednesday evening (Feb. 5), bringing a standing-room-only crowd to the Barker Centers Thompson Room. The women, who were contemporaries on The New Yorker staff and who both have daughters entering Harvards class of…