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Campus & Community
This old house:
Artemas Wards troubles began one April day in 1775 when he got out of bed, and they have continued now for more than 200 years. Wards two-century-old journey from pre-eminence to obscurity has provided lessons in historical research techniques for modern-day Harvard graduate students, lessons that they in turn have passed along to undergraduates.
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Campus & Community
HBS student organization awards $60,000 to nonprofits
On April 22, the Harbus Foundation presented grants totaling $60,000 to five Boston-area nonprofit organizations. The Harbus Foundation is a student-run Harvard Business School organization whose mission is to support education, literacy, and journalism projects in Boston. This year, approximately 50 Harvard Business School students reviewed almost 100 grant applications submitted by Boston-area nonprofit organizations.…
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Campus & Community
Extending class into cyberspace:
In January 2002, former Medical School Executive Dean for Administration Paul Levy took over as president and chief executive officer of ailing Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, which had been losing $50 to $60 million a year.
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Campus & Community
Local educators named Conant fellows
Three Boston educators were named Conant Fellows at a ceremony hosted by Graduate School of Education (GSE) Dean Ellen Condliffe Lagemann and Boston Superintendent Thomas Payzant at the Harvard Faculty Club on Monday (May 19). The Conant Fellowships, named for Harvard President Emeritus James Bryant Conant, were established in 1986, at Harvards 350th anniversary, to…
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Campus & Community
Hail fellow, well met!
Nieman Foundation Fellow Ann M. Simmons, bureau chief for the Los Angeles Times in Johannesburg, South Africa, receives her Nieman certificate from Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers at a ceremony at Massachusetts Hall on May 15. Summers told the fellows that Harvard derives great benefits from your presence, and expressed his belief that the program…
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Campus & Community
KSG announces Roy and Lila Ash Institute:
The Kennedy School of Government has announced the naming of the Roy and Lila Ash Institute for Democratic Governance and Innovation. The Ash Institute will build upon the Institute for Government Innovation, established in 2001 by a $50 million endowment from the Ford Foundation. A gift from Roy and Lila Ash will expand the institutes…
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Campus & Community
African leaders assess African leadership
Purposefully, and without fanfare, 11 prominent African leaders spent last weekend at the Kennedy School diagnosing the dilemma of elected political leadership in Africa. Why, asked two former presidents, two former prime ministers, a foreign minister, and a clutch of current and former ministers, did so many promising democrats become autocrats after their first terms…
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Campus & Community
Hunter-Gault delivers ‘new news out of Africa’:
Theres new news out of Africa, said veteran journalist Charlayne Hunter-Gault.
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Campus & Community
Med student study affirms diversity
Racial and ethnic diversity in the student population is a positive influence that helps medical students work more effectively with patients of different backgrounds, according to a study in the May issue of Academic Medicine, the journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges. The findings were cited in a brief submitted to the Supreme…
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Campus & Community
Overdue since ’52
This beats the record, said Jon Lanham, associate librarian of Lamont Library, who collects late return due date cards. One from a book due in 1967 held the record until The American Revolution, Part I, 1766-1776 by Sir George Otto Trevelyan (Longman, Green, and Co., 1899) was returned this month after turning up in the…
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Campus & Community
Title bout over Title IX at Radcliffe:
Ever since the landmark law became a talking point for the Bush administration, Title IX – some 30 years after its passage – is big news, all over again. In the current debate surrounding the 1972 piece of legislation that bans sexual discrimination in athletic programs receiving federal aid, both critics and proponents of Title…
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Campus & Community
Sports briefs
Women’s heavies stun Brown, capture EAWRC title The Radcliffe heavyweight crew (10-1, 4-1 Ivy) upset five-time defending champion Brown this past Sunday (May 18) on the Cooper River in Camden,…
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Campus & Community
Newsmakers
Sophomore is named Lehrman Scholar Harvard sophomore Thomas Wolf has recently been named one of 12 Gilder Lehrman History Scholars selected from more than 400 candidates nationwide. Wolf will be…
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Campus & Community
The Big Picture:
Christopher Lenney can tell you what Unitarianism has to do with candlepin bowling, how Maines Great-Big Line is neither great nor big, and why the Christ Church rectory on Garden Street and the Buckingham House in Radcliffe Yard have architectural offspring in Lexington and Bedford but not Nantucket or Plymouth.
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Campus & Community
Harvard Employees donate $1 million:
More than 600 charities and nonprofits, largely in Boston and Cambridge, will receive grants this year thanks to the voluntary donations of thousands of Harvard faculty, staff, and retirees.
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Campus & Community
Police reports
Following are some of the incidents reported to Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending May 17. The official log is located at 1030 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
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Campus & Community
United we celebrate
Harvard Union of Clerical and Technical Workers President Adrienne Landau (left) and Director Bill Jaeger balloon the campus on Monday (May 19), just as it was decorated 15 years ago, when the election that led to the unions formation was held.
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Campus & Community
Errata
In a story on the Harvard University Police Departments Rape Aggression Defense program that appeared in the May 15 issue of the Gazette, HUPD Sgt. Brian Lakin was incorrectly identified. The Gazette regrets the error.
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Campus & Community
Childhood abuse hurts the brain
A thick cable of nerve cells connecting the right and left sides of the brain (corpus callosum) is smaller than normal in abused children, says Martin Teicher, associate professor of…
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Science & Tech
Lung imaging method allows visualization of airways
A new dynamic imaging technique described by Mitchell Albert, Harvard Medical School assistant professor of radiology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital; Angela Tooker, MIT graduate student; Kwan Soo Hong, Harvard…
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Campus & Community
Science enrichment program brings Cambridge youth to Harvard:
Early last week (May 6), a new generation of scientists from Cambridge public schools – more than 250 of them – descended on the Yard to take part in this years annual Science Day, a daylong exploration of the human body sponsored by Harvard ExperiMentors, a Phillips Brooks House Association service program. Celebrating its 10th…
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Campus & Community
Stride Rite Fellowships launch lifetimes of community service:
Harvard University President Lawrence H. Summers presided over the 20th anniversary of The Stride Rite Community Service Program Thursday evening (May 8), presenting three seniors with $25,000 postgraduate fellowships to fund yearlong service projects that will ideally launch lifetime dedication to public service.
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Campus & Community
Master of 20th century music visits Harvard:
Pierre Boulez, one of the great masters of 20th century music, was at Harvard last Friday (May 9), regaling an overflow crowd at the Center for European Studies with fascinating glimpses into his career as a composer and conductor.
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Campus & Community
Historic house move is Cambridge spectator sport:
Ninety-six Prescott, a house that has lodged Cambridge students for 115 years, turned the corner this weekend to assume a new location at 18 Sumner Road as a hundred neighbors, Harvard students, faculty, and staff, and city officials looked on.
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Campus & Community
Shades of Gray: ‘Playing House’ at the Harvard Film Archive
Puberty isnt easy. Nor is filmmaking. Playing House, a documentary film about five adolescent girls at Fay School in Southboro, Mass., takes on both. The film, shot over three years at the prestigious and venerable boarding school, fairly pulsates with pubescent angst. On May 5, at the Carpenter Centers Harvard Film Archive, Playing House director…
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Campus & Community
Composer, music theorist David Lewin dies at 69
David Lewin, a composer, musician, and music theorist known for his analysis of music of the 19th and 20th centuries, died May 5 from heart disease. He was 69.
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Campus & Community
HUCE recognizes research on environment
Offering students a unique opportunity for presenting their research, the Harvard University Center for the Environment (HUCE) held a poster competition during the annual symposium for the Working Interdisciplinary Students for the Environment (WISE). A panel of judges evaluated the posters and selected two award recipients: Ethan Yeh 03, who examined the effect of indoor…
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Campus & Community
The African connection:
Harvards African students have created a new network that seeks to link disparate African organizations across the University and become a resource for African students, faculty, and other members of the Harvard community.
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Campus & Community
Crimson get sweet:
As cool as a cucumber, sophomore Courtney Bergman upset the nations fifth-ranked womens tennis player in high-stakes NCAA tournament action this past Saturday (May 10) at the Beren Tennis Center. Down 15-40 and tied at three games apiece in the third and deciding set, Bergman, who captured the first set, 6-3, before falling in the…