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Campus & Community
Motley Crew
As part of the Harvard House intramural crew races held May 7, Kirkland House coxswain Kate Riggs 03 of the winning mens A team pays the price for victory with the obligatory dunk in the Charles. The annual spring passage pits boats from Harvards undergraduate houses against one another in a series of races.
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Campus & Community
Updating library collections: A global challenge:
Shortly after Iran fell to Islamic revolutionaries in 1979, a book dealer sending volumes to Harvards libraries cut out pictures of the deposed Shah so that the books would not be confiscated.
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Campus & Community
Newsmakers
Heaney wins Capote Award Ralph Waldo Emerson Poet in Residence Seamus Heaney has received the 2003 Truman Capote Award for Literary Criticism for his work “Finders Keepers: Selected Prose 1971-2001”…
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Campus & Community
New Pleasant St. condos to house faculty and first-time home buyers
Pleasant Street Condominiums has officially opened, offering both Harvard faculty and Cambridge residents new home ownership opportunities in the Cambridgeport neighborhood, just minutes from Harvard Square. The housing complex brings sensitive development to the neighborhood and much-needed housing for Harvard affiliates and Cambridge residents.
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Campus & Community
Simultaneous translation
University Disability Coordinator Marie Trottier hosted a breakfast for the business community and the Justice Department on May 9. The keynote speaker was the Assistant Attorney General in the Civil Rights Department Ralph F. Boyd Jr. (right), J.D. 84. Beth Maclay, ASL interpreter with the Department of Justice, stands on the left.
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Campus & Community
Schimmel memorial service set
A memorial service for Annemarie Schimmel, professor of Indo-Muslim culture emerita, will be held May 23 at 2:30 p.m. at the Memorial Church. The service will be followed by a reception in the Thompson Room of the Barker Center. All members of the Harvard community are invited to attend.
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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 May 10. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
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Campus & Community
Admissions yield near 80 percent once again
Continuing a recent trend, the yield on students admitted to the College has once again reached levels last seen in the early 1970s. Close to 80 percent of the students admitted to the Class of 2007 have chosen to enroll this coming September. The high yield means that very few applicants can be admitted from…
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Campus & Community
WSRP names research associates, visiting faculty
The Womens Studies in Religion Program (WSRP) at Harvard Divinity School (HDS) has announced its five research associates for the 2003-04 academic year. They include Kecia Ali of Brandeis University Ana María Bidegain of National University of Colombia Kelly Chong of Yale University and Sharon Gillerman of Hebrew Union College. In addition, Hanna Herzog of…
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Campus & Community
Memorial Minute:
On May 1, 2003, the following Minute was shared with the Faculty of Education.
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Campus & Community
CSV honors volunteers with Mack Davis Awards
Cambridge School Volunteers Inc. (CSV) honored approximately 1,000 of its volunteers who served in kindergarten through grade 12 of the Cambridge Public Schools during the 2002-03 school year at a reception hosted at the Harvard Faculty Club on May 7. Together, these volunteers provided more than 55,000 hours of individualized academic services to Cambridge youth.…
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Campus & Community
Moose crashes Dunster House Formal!
This year, Dunster Houses spring formal boasted a record-breaking 400 students and tutors. As in the past, the ice moose and chocolate-covered strawberries were the hits of the evening. Beautifully attired ladies and gentlemen attested to the fact that, except for the annual Goat Roast, this evening was the most memorable event of the year.
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Campus & Community
‘A conversation with the CDC’:
At one point in his presentation at the Harvard School of Public Health (SPH), Joseph Henderson, associate director of the Office for Terrorism Preparedness and Emergency Response at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), asked his audience, How many of you are planning careers in public health?
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Campus & Community
PBHA names new executive director
Phillips Brooks House Association (PBHA), the student-led public service agency at the University, has named Gene Corbin as its next executive director, PBHA President Rini Fonseca-Sabune 04 announced yesterday (May 14). Corbin, a senior research associate at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG) with several decades experience in public service management and student leadership, assumes…
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Campus & Community
‘In Her Own Hand’ exhibition opens at Loeb Library
Drawing on the collection of the Loeb Music Library, the new exhibition In Her Own Hand: Operas Composed by Women, 1625-1939, features little-known scores by women composers, and follows the development of opera from the Italian courts in the 17th century, to the courts of the Holy Roman Empire and the German princely states in…
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Campus & Community
How to get there from here:
Theres no shortage of college aspirations among low-income high school students. What distinguishes low-income kids from their middle class peers is follow through.
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Campus & Community
Justice, Welfare, Economics Program names fellows
The Program on Justice, Welfare, and Economics at Harvard University has announced its graduate student fellowship recipients for 2003-04. This interdisciplinary initiative promotes research that connects freedom, justice, and economics to human welfare and development. Dissertation fellowships and research grants seek to develop a new generation of scholars whose work encompasses ethical, political, and economic…
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Campus & Community
Three honored for undergraduate teaching:
Teaching fellow Zahr Said changes the way her students think. Benjamin Friedman, a professor of economics, once visited a student in the hospital to help her catch up on class work. Mathematics preceptor Dale Winter makes sure all his students understand calculus, no matter how long he must stay after class.
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Campus & Community
Weissman Program launches 24 interns around the globe
For the past 10 years the Weissman International Internship Program, established by Paul (52) and Harriet Weissman in 1994, has provided nearly 170 sophomores and juniors with the opportunity to participate in an international internship in a field of work related to their academic and career goals. The internship program strives to enable students to…
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Campus & Community
Policies regarding visitors, summer residency explained
Based on the latest information from the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Harvard University is adjusting its policies regarding travel by students, faculty, staff, and visitors to or from the SARS-affected areas of China, Hong Kong and Taiwan. These particular changes will most immediately affect Commencement, reunions…
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Campus & Community
Harvard heavies take Eastern Sprints :
The Harvard mens heavyweight crew knocked off the favored University of Wisconsin by capturing its 22nd title at the Eastern Athletic Rowing Conference Regatta this past May 11 at Worcesters Lake Quinsigamond. The Crimson rowers conquered the blustery 2000-meter course in a time of 6:04.1, besting the Badgers by a length and a half. Dartmouth…
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Campus & Community
Cambridge names ‘Scott Sandberg Square’
On the corner of Brattle Street and James Street in Cambridge, just outside the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studys Gilman Gate, is a black sign on a black pole, naming the square in honor of Radcliffe recycling pioneer Scott Sandberg.
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Campus & Community
HUCTW to host ‘family’ open house
In conjunction with the Harvard Union of Clerical and Technical Workers (HUCTWs) recent online housing survey, an open house will be held Saturday (May 17) for members of the Harvard community to learn about affordable housing. The event, which will run from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Middle East Restaurant in Central Square,…
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Campus & Community
Self-defense helps women take back the night:
“No!” “No!” “No! No! No! No!” Shouting in unison, the women gathered in an empty Gund Hall room to kick, punch, and shout in explosive, carefully choreographed moves, as if rehearsing some sort of angry, punk-rock chorus line.
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Campus & Community
In brief
HBS installs solar panels Harvard Business School (HBS) has been awarded a grant for up to $172,800 from the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative (MTC) to install photovoltaic solar energy panels on…
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Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
Late May 1970 – Veteran football coach John M. Yovicsin announces that for reasons of health he will retire at the end of the 1970 season. After the gridiron, Yovicsin…
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Campus & Community
Career Forum in June offers Harvard candidates priority
Career Forum 2003: Resources for the Current Economy, will be held June 17 at the Graduate School of Design, 48 Quincy St.
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Campus & Community
Faculty Council notice for May 14
At its 16th meeting of the year, the Faculty Council heard a report on the year now concluding from Dean William C. Kirby. The council also discussed with Dean Benedict Gross (mathematics and undergraduate education) the possibility of collecting data for the CUE Guide via an online questionnaire. In addition, the council discussed with Dean…
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Campus & Community
New cancer drug wins FDA approval
When he was a first-year student at Harvard Medical School, Alfred Goldberg, now a professor of cell biology, wondered why the body destroys its own proteins, which are so vital…
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Campus & Community
Extension School class closes distance:
What would be the opposite of social justice? Gregory Nagy asked his Extension School Introduction to Greek Literature class last Thursday (May 1) evening.