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Campus & Community
Daylong literary fete to feature award-winning poets
A renowned gathering of women poets, including Pulitzer Prize winners, Emerging Artist honorees, and state poets laureate, will gather on April 12 to celebrate the spoken word and their common bond as fellows-in-residence at Radcliffe.
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Campus & Community
CPD to encourage bicyclists to light up night:
Be Bright – Use a Light is the new message that representatives of the Cambridge Bicycle Committee and the Cambridge Police Departments (CPDs) Bike Patrol want to deliver to area cyclists. Since nearly half of all cycling deaths occur at night without lights – even with only 3 percent of bike riding occurring after dark…
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Campus & Community
Looking for the meaning of life at the bottom of the sea:
Charles Langmuir sailed to the top of the world to study the bottom of the ocean.
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Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
April 1910 – The Andover-Harvard Theological Library formally comes into existence. Owen S. Gates, former Librarian of the Andover Theological Seminary, becomes the first librarian of the combined collections. April…
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Campus & Community
Online Du Bois series adds Alexander, Parks
The W.E.B. Du Bois Institutes Black Writers Reading series continues online with a new Webcast of Elizabeth Alexander and Suzan-Lori Parks. View the latest entry at http://streams.wgbh.org/forum/forum.php?organization=Harvard+%2F+Du+Bois+Institute. For more information, or to access the latest entry, visit http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~du_bois/.
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Campus & Community
Harvard bids on land in Allston
Harvard has bid $75 million to purchase 91 acres of Massachusetts Turnpike Authority land located south of Cambridge Street in Allston. Harvards bid has been referred to the MTA Board, which will vote to select the highest responsible bidder no later than (Friday) April 4. Harvard sees the purchase as a long-term investment and expects…
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Campus & Community
Emerson’s words continue to inspire
What would Ralph Waldo Emerson say about the events planned to commemorate his 200th birthday?
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Campus & Community
An abiding presence:
What would Ralph Waldo Emerson say about the events planned to commemorate his 200th birthday?
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Campus & Community
Class of ’07 selected from pool of over 20,000:
For the first time, a total of more than 20,000 students applied for undergraduate admission, making the Class of 2007 the most competitive in Harvards history. The 2,056 admitted students were selected from a pool of 20,986, an admission rate of 9.8 percent. Students were notified by letter and e-mail on Wednesday (April 2).
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Science & Tech
Looking for the meaning of life at the bottom of the sea
Charles Langmuir, Harvard professor of geochemistry, loves going to sea. “It’s tremendously stimulating, wonderful, exciting, and eye-opening,” he says enthusiastically. “Every time I’ve gone since 1984, I’ve seen things I’ve…
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Science & Tech
Cool X-ray disk points to new type of black hole
Black holes are objects so dense and with a gravitational potential so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape the pull if it ventures too close. Black holes are…
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Campus & Community
An icy rite of spring:
More intrepid than Sir Ernest Shackleton and his Endurance team … staring down icebergs with the swagger and bravado of the Titanic … its the Harvard crew coaches and their effort to free the Charles River from its icy winter stillness.
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Campus & Community
Traditional ecological wisdom questioned:
Controversial Danish writer Bjorn Lomborg was challenged by a U.S. environmental leader in a spirited debate over the global environment held in the Kennedy Schools Forum Thursday night (March 13). Lomborg, whose book The Skeptical Environmentalist has been condemned by some in the scientific community, argued that the world is not faced with imminent deterioration…
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Campus & Community
‘Engaged Buddhists’ take on world:
To some, engaged Buddhism may seem like a contradiction in terms. Traditionally, Buddhists have sought to avoid suffering by disengaging from desire, training themselves through meditation to look past the world of illusion to the spiritual reality beneath.
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Campus & Community
New Harvard report: Chilling warnings on nuclear terror
A 10-kiloton nuclear bomb exploding at New Yorks Grand Central Station is a prospect that is all-too real today and one that would kill 500,000 people and cause an estimated $1 trillion in economic damage, according to a new report from Harvards Project on Managing the Atom.
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Campus & Community
Crimson take UVM, skate to finals:
Amidst a four-game non-losing streak (three wins and one tie since Feb. 21), the Harvard mens hockey team (21-8-2) picked up two of its biggest victories of the season this past weekend with a two-game sweep of Vermont in the best-of-three ECAC quarterfinals. With the wins, a 4-2 decision on Friday (March 14) and a…
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Campus & Community
Women cyclists fueled by grit, muscle, coach:
Nearly a century ago, bicycle racing was the most popular spectator sport in the nation. Velodromes were as common as shopping malls, early 20th century writers penned rabid reviews of bike races, and in 1903, “across the pond,” a handful of anxious race promoters waited to see if their race – named simply the “Tour…
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Campus & Community
In brief
Online Du Bois series adds Dove, Wideman The W.E.B. Du Bois Institute’s Black Writers Reading series continues online with a new Webcast of Rita Dove and John Wideman. View the…
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Campus & Community
Newsmakers
DePinho selected AACR award recipient The American Association of Cancer Research (AACR) has named Professor of Medicine and Genetics Ronald A. DePinho as the recipient of its 43rd annual AACR-G.H.A.…
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Campus & Community
University increases visibility of security on campus:
Due to an increase in homeland security alert status, which was recently raised to code orange, or high, because of the heightened probability of war in Iraq, Harvard has increased visible security on campus and urges faculty and students to check travel advisories, especially students who plan to travel over spring break and particularly those…
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Campus & Community
St. Patty’s Day a charm for fundraiser
It was like finding a four-leaf clover. This year’s Daffodil Day bloomed on St. Patrick’s Day and was rewarded with the biggest yield ever.
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Campus & Community
Giving a voice to the voiceless
Elegant facts await me. Small things in this world are mine, recited Elizabeth Alexander as she spoke her poem about the Venus Hottentot. If language is a currency that grants acquisition, then Alexander and her fellow reader, Pulitzer Prize-winning dramatist Suzan-Lori Parks, have joint ownership of small things and large insights.
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Campus & Community
Memorial Minute for George H. Williams
At a meeting of the Faculty of Divinity on February 24, 2003, the following Minute was placed upon the records.
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Campus & Community
Purchasing initiative could save millions:
A cost-savings and efficiency initiative begun by President Lawrence H. Summers has begun to bear fruit in the first University-wide preferred provider program, which would save a projected $2 million to $3 million annually.
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Campus & Community
Fifteen finalists named for KSG award
The Institute for Government Innovation at Harvards Kennedy School of Government has announced that 15 groundbreaking initiatives have been named finalists for the Innovations in American Government Award. Each of the 15 finalists, eligible to win $100,000, will receive a $10,000 grant to support replication activities.
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Campus & Community
Pluralism Project offers research grants for summer
Harvard&s Pluralism Project invites students in the comparative study of religion, anthropology, sociology, history, government, and other academic fields to participate in research on the changing contours of American religious life. Undergraduates and graduate students with academic backgrounds in the Hindu, Buddhist, Muslim, Jain, or Sikh traditions and/or in other relevant academic fields are encouraged…
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Campus & Community
Center for Public Leadership offers doctoral fellowship
The Center for Public Leadership at the Kennedy School of Government has announced the availability of one doctoral fellowship for the 2003-04 academic year. The fellowship, open to any student in good standing in a Harvard doctoral or advanced- degree program, is designed to provide the successful applicant the opportunity to complete and/or make significant…
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Campus & Community
KSG announces Kuwait research fund
The Kennedy School of Government (KSG) has announced the fourth funding cycle for the Kuwait Program Research Fund. The fund is made possible through the generous support of the Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Sciences. A KSG faculty committee will consider applications for small one-year grants (up to $30,000) to support advanced research by…
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Campus & Community
Exhibition documents life of influential theatrical designer:
Edward Gordon Craig (1872-1966) was perhaps the most influential theatrical designer in the first decades of the 20th century, and was known for using nonrealistic, symbolist design rather than sentimentality in his creations. A master at the art of woodcut engravings, a publisher, editor, book illustrator, and essayist, Craigs passions covered many art forms, but…