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Campus & Community
Medical School’s Kevin Wang among winners of Harold M. Weintraub graduate student award:
Kevin C. Wang of Harvard Medical School was one of 16 graduate students from North America and Europe selected to receive the 2003 Harold M. Weintraub Graduate Student Award, which is sponsored by the Basic Sciences Division of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.
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Campus & Community
The ‘ethical strategies’ of novels:
As the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study continues to focus its identity as a center dedicated to advancing knowledge at its outermost limits, it couldnt have picked a better poster girl than novelist Zadie Smith, a Radcliffe Fellow and the final speaker in the Institutes Deans Lecture Series Monday (April 14). Smith, the celebrated young…
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Campus & Community
Mental Health Week to examine range of topics :
Harvards second annual Mental Health Awareness Week will run April 21-25. Organized by the undergraduate Mental Health Awareness and Advocacy Group, the five-day event will feature talks, student displays, and activities designed to educate the Harvard community on various mental health topics. Following is a schedule of the four main events.
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Campus & Community
Tennis: Back-to-back (to-back) wins:
Playing host to a pair of Ivy challengers this past weekend, the Harvard mens tennis team scored two wins with a 6-1 upset of Columbia on April 11, and a 5-2 victory over Cornell on April 12. With the wins, Harvard remains perfect in league play, having downed Dartmouth, 7-0, earlier in the month in…
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Campus & Community
Opening minds:
Can education help repair the frayed ties between the United States and the Arab world? With a regime toppling in Iraq, a panel of distinguished academics gathered in Harvard Hall last Saturday (April 12) afternoon to speak to the question and offer practical solutions for drawing the United States and the nations of the Middle…
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Campus & Community
Former Gov. Jane Swift honored by Harvard College:
As the first female governor of Massachusetts and the first governor in the United States to give birth while in office, Jane Swift received more than her share of media attention – both positive and negative – for her very public attempt to balance work and family.
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Campus & Community
Police advisory:
On April 12, at approximately 2:50 a.m., a graduate student was the victim of an attempted unarmed robbery. While walking along Kirkland Street near Francis Avenue, the student encountered two males standing on the sidewalk. One of the suspects demanded that the victim give him his wallet. After the victim stated that he did not…
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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 12. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
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Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
April 5, 1931 – Easter Sunday. The Russian bells of Lowell House ring out for the first time in Cambridge. April 23, 1955 – The Harvard Glee Club and the…
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Campus & Community
Web site offers emergency preparedness information :
The University has created a Web site, www.emergency.harvard.edu, to provide information regarding the Universitys response to national security alerts, travel advisories, and similar news. The site is updated as situations warrant. This site is also where information will appear in the event of an emergency situation that affects the Harvard community.
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Campus & Community
Clarification
The Gazette failed to identify Anthonia Umeh (left), Kenechukwu Abajue, 8, and Carolyn Turk, the interim superintendent of schools in Cambridge, in this photo that appeared on page 10 of the April 10 edition of the Gazette. The three were joined by 800 other visitors to the Fogg Art Museum on April 6 to view…
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Campus & Community
Tensions, talks highlight Korea conference:
In a rare U.S. public appearance, North Koreas ambassador to the United Nations, Song Ryol Han, repeated his nations call for bilateral talks with the United States over North Koreas nuclear program and said that the Iraq war has heightened North Korean fears of American aggression.
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Science & Tech
In simulation, bioterrorist warning system passes test
Working within a bioterrorism scenario, an early warning system to detect attacks fulfilled its mission. Those who conducted the test say that, had it been real, millions of lives would…
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Science & Tech
Graduate student Scott Sowerby finds surprising side to King James II
In 1688, in the “Bloodless” or “Glorious Revolution,” King James II of England, abandoned by many of his supporters and facing an invading army from the Netherlands led by his…
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Campus & Community
Once Upon a Time …
Jack was a thief and Little Red Riding Hood a seductress. Kids adore ogres and beheadings as much as princesses and obedient little children. The moral to the story might…
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Campus & Community
CityStep: ‘Explore, Dream, Discover’:
Sabrina Peck 84 never thought that the combination of dance theater, public service, and education that seemed so specific to her would appeal to generations of Harvard students. It follows that she never imagined that such a combination could propel her program, CityStep, to the ranks of the campus most popular, enduring civic activities.
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Campus & Community
What to tell children about war:
War talk and pictures are everywhere and adults are wondering what to tell their children about it.
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Campus & Community
Unknown feeds public fear of SARS:
The mystery ailment known as severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) has the potential to spread rapidly in Bostons unexposed population, but the biggest public health danger now may be fear, experts told U.S. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy Friday (April 4) at a briefing at Harvards Countway Medical Library.
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Campus & Community
‘Manliness,’ an obsolete concept? Discuss.
A few years back, an editor from Harvard Magazine called Harvey Mansfield and asked if he would contribute a short quote for a profile of a fellow faculty member. Mansfield replied that the quality that had always impressed him about this colleague was his manliness.
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Campus & Community
Affirming affirmative action
A boldly worded title – Do the Right Thing: Why Harvard Supports Affirmative Action and Why Every College Should – left little room for doubt about the positions of the panelists at the Graduate School of Educations (GSE) Askwith Forum Tuesday (April 8). Indeed, it was by explicit design that the panel, co-sponsored by the…
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Campus & Community
A special notice regarding Commencement Exercises
Thursday, June 5, 2003 Morning Exercises To accommodate the increasing number of those wishing to attend Harvard’s Commencement Exercises, the following guidelines are proposed to facilitate admission into Tercentenary Theatre…
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Campus & Community
The Big Picture:
Robert Zinck has nothing against movies that tell stories, movies with characters and dialogue and dramatic arcs and plot points. If people want to make films like that, thats fine with him. But he has other interests.
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Campus & Community
River of words
Blooming on the banks of the Charles – perhaps in lieu of more seasonal blossoms – are bunches of poems about spring. Leverett House tutors worked along with students to post lyrically laminated signs along the riverbed. While they were at it, they picked up trash, despite Sapphos ancient warning: If you are squeamish,/Dont prod…
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Campus & Community
President, Provost hold 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:
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Campus & Community
Emergency preparedness at Harvard:
Web site offers information about emergency preparedness at Harvard
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Campus & Community
KSG group selects Savitz Fellowship recipient
The Kennedy School of Governments (KSGs) Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Group (ENRFG) has announced that the Savitz Fellowship has been conferred to Lori Snyder, a Ph.D. student in public policy at KSG. The fellowship, granted to the best paper written by a doctoral student in the area of environmental and resource policy during 2002,…
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Campus & Community
Popular music that belongs to everyone:
In his 1970s lament for lost innocence, American Pie, Don McLean sang about the day the music died.
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Campus & Community
HDS librarian Grossmann dies
Maria Schweinburg Grossmann, a specialist in 16th century European history who began her career at the Divinity School library in 1956 as a member of the acquisitions staff, died on March 30.
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Campus & Community
Global interests linked to developing world:
The interests of the developed world are closely associated with the success of the developing world, asserted Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers as this years Edward L. Godkin lecturer. Summers drew a standing-room-only crowd at Mondays forum (April 7), where he delivered an almost-hour-long talk on Globalization and American Interests.