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Campus & Community
New research finds school hiring and support practices fall short in K-12 public schools:
New research from the Graduate School of Education (GSE) reveals that many schools are not organized to hire and support new teachers in ways that help them enter the profession smoothly and attain early success:
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Campus & Community
Is it hormones or a hazard?:
Adolescence, that betwixt-and-between age that bridges childhood and early adulthood, can be more than just awkward years of peer pressure, raging hormones, and changing identities. Those early teen years can be downright dangerous, as risk-taking behavior meets poor judgment with disastrous or even deadly outcomes.
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Campus & Community
Symposium analyzes, celebrates ‘thug’:
Few spaces at Harvard are more burdened by symbols of the Universitys glorious past than the Barker Centers Thompson Room.
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Campus & Community
Personal stories, intellectual inquiry mark Mental Health Awareness Week:
Cait Storks voice wavered as she addressed the audience in a Harvard Hall classroom, speaking clearly but cautiously about her battle with bipolar disorder and her high school suicide attempts.
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Campus & Community
Have HOLLIS, will travel:
Hey, very cool, commented more than one undergraduate entering Loker Commons recently and seeing Jeff Kosokoff, head of reference services at Lamont Library, sitting just inside the door. Kosokoff may claim these greetings were provoked by his winsome smile, but it may have had more to do with the sign on the table in front…
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Campus & Community
Moreno Ocampo named ICC chief prosecutor:
Following an intensive six-month international search, Luis Moreno Ocampo, the Robert F. Kennedy Visiting Professor at Harvard Law School, was unanimously elected the first chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) by the 89 members of the ICCs governing Assembly of States Parties this past Tuesday (April 22).
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Campus & Community
In brief
Springfest 2003 is set for this weekend Rain or shine, Springfest 2003 – Harvard’s springtime carnival for the entire University community – will be held April 27 from noon to…
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Campus & Community
Graham Burt Blaine Jr. dies at 84:
Graham Burt Blaine Jr., chief of psychiatry at University Health Services (UHS) from 1964 to 1971, died April 7 from complications arising from a stroke. He was 84.
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Campus & Community
The Big Picture:
Love makes it hard for Janis Forde to do what she does. Its also what keeps her at it.
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Campus & Community
Sun’s warming is global:
The twin solar images glared from the screen in the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics auditorium, green tinged with yellow, swirls of fire erupting from the surface.
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Campus & Community
Wireless traffic coder smoothes communications snarls:
You pick up your cell phone, dial, and, if all goes well, you talk, say good-bye, and hang up.
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Campus & Community
SPH Poster Day winners named
Out of 37 entries, the School of Public Health (SPH) has named two winners for its 17th annual Poster and Exhibit Day. Pauline Koh-Banerjee won for her research Changes in body weight and body fat distribution as risk factors for clinical diabetes in U.S. men and Dmitri Wiederschain won for his exhibit Extreme C-terminus of…
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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 April 19. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave, sixth floor.
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Campus & Community
This month is Harvard history
April 25, 1959 – At the invitation of the Law School Forum, Cuban Premier Fidel Castro speaks before a crowd of more than 7,000 at Soldiers Field. Introduced by FAS Dean McGeorge Bundy, Castro speaks in English, with periodic assistance from Public Relations Ambassador Teresa Casuso. Earlier at noon, Castro and an entourage of 50…
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Campus & Community
Committee to Address Sexual Assault at Harvard issues report:
After eight months of intensive review, the Committee to Address Sexual Assault at Harvard (CASAH), chaired by Professor of International Health and Assistant Professor of Medicine Jennifer Leaning, has released its report containing recommendations to strengthen the Colleges educational and support services related to sexual violence on campus. The report will now undergo a period…
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Campus & Community
Intrepid blossom
At least one magnolia blossom is unintimidated by the winterlike temperatures recently visited on the region.
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Campus & Community
Iraqi reconstruction a tall order for U.S.:
As the aggressor in a war it chose to wage, the United States is being judged by high standards in its conduct of both the war and its aftermath, School of Public Health Professor Jennifer Leaning said Tuesday (April 22).
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Science & Tech
Nanotechnology: Big issues from small stuff
Discoveries in nanotechnology could change the future. Where will such discoveries most likely to take place? Don’t assume it’ll be the United States, cautions Mallinckrodt Professor of Chemistry George Whitesides.…
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Science & Tech
Global warming is not so hot
Scientists at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics took a look at how weather has changed in the past 1,000 years. They looked at studies of changes in glaciers, corals, stalagmites,…
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Campus & Community
Twelve Harvard affiliates named Soros Fellows:
Twelve Harvard-related students are among the 30 recipients for the 2003 Paul and Daisy Soros New American Fellowship. Fellows receive up to a $20,000 stipend plus half-tuition for up to two years of graduate study at any institution of higher learning in the United States.
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Campus & Community
Matthiessen reveals nature through travels, words :
Author and naturalist Peter Matthiessen described a life seeking the mystery within nature Sunday (April 13). He told of traveling to the Icelandic coast where the last great auk died, chasing great white sharks in the southern ocean, and traversing todays environmental battleground in Alaskas oil fields.
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Campus & Community
Returning plunder, making reparations:
Stuart Eizenstat calls it the greatest robbery in world history – the Nazis theft of money, valuables, artworks, and property from Jews, Catholics, and others during World War II.
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Campus & Community
Harvard Undergraduate Council and President Lawrence H. Summers to co-host Springfest 2003:
The Harvard Undergraduate Council (UC) and President Lawrence H. Summers have announced that they will co-host Springfest 2003 on Sunday (April 27) from noon to 4 p.m. in the area of the MAC Quad.
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Campus & Community
In Bogotá, don’t park on the sidewalk:
Toward the beginning of his three-year term as mayor of Bogotá, Colombia, Enrique Penalosa was nearly impeached.
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Campus & Community
Common bacteria associated with a leading cause of blindness:
A small serological study that is published in the April 14 issue of the Archives of Ophthalmology shows, for the first time, that the bacterial pathogen Chlamydia pneumoniae (C. pneumoniae), a common bacteria that can cause respiratory infections, is associated with age-related macular degeneration, a leading cause of blindness in the United States.
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Campus & Community
Zimbabwean journalist Nyarota finds sanctuary at Harvard :
Geoffrey Nyarota knew something was wrong last December when an acquaintance called to tell him the government-owned radio was reporting that he had been dismissed as editor-in-chief of the Daily News, Zimbabwes largest independent newspaper.
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Campus & Community
President Summers and Provost Hyman 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: