All articles
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Campus & CommunityCrimson hockey tourney boundTalk about a turnaround. After dropping seven of their final 10 regular season games, the Harvard mens hockey teams postseason hopes werent exactly sky high. Yet with a most unusual three game win streak under their belt: all OT wins – against Brown, Clarkson, and Ivy Champion Cornell – the Crimson suddenly finds itself thrust… 
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Campus & CommunityBig Dance disappointsTo the tune of 85-58, the North Carolina Tar Heels tripped up the Harvard womens basketball team this past Saturday (March 16) at the Big Dance in Chapel Hill. Capitalizing on superior quickness and physical play – and the Crimsons cold shooting (33 percent) – the fourth-seeded Tar Heels, who led by 18 at the… 
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Campus & CommunityOperating without a curriculumA first-year science teacher starts the school year knowing nothing about the course hes been hired to teach except its title: Physical Sciences. 
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Campus & CommunityThe Big PictureThe way the word model is used in academic discourse can seem a bit of a letdown for those who grew up gluing together miniature aircraft carriers from boxes full of tiny plastic parts or stretching tissue paper over the balsa frameworks of World War I biplanes. Too often in academe models turn out to… 
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Campus & CommunityNewsmakersHarvard fencing sends three to NCAA Championships Junior foiler Ben Schmidt has been selected to compete at the NCAA Fencing Championships slated for March 21-24 at Drew University in Madison,… 
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Campus & CommunityDeep structureIf you were to say, John is a red-headed physics student, any native speaker of English would instantly accept the sentence as normal and correct. 
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Campus & CommunityPolice reportsFollowing are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Saturday, March 16. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor. 
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Campus & CommunityLecture on Nobels is set for April 4The Harvard Foundation for Intercultural and Race Relations presents Per Wästberg, a member of the Nobel Prize Committee of the Swedish Academy. Wästberg will discuss The Nobel Prize: Who Gets It and Who Does Not, on Thursday, April 4 at 7:30 p.m., at the Memorial Church. This is the inaugural Peter J. Gomes Lecture. 
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Campus & CommunityThis month in Harvard historyMarch 29, 1872 – The Arnold Arboretum (the nations oldest arboretum) formally comes into existence when, at the discretion of three Boston trustees (George B. Emerson, John James Dixwell, and Francis E. Parker), a residuary bequest of over $100,000 from New Bedford (Mass.) merchant James Arnold is legally transferred to the Harvard Corporation to develop… 
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Campus & CommunityFaculty council notice for March 20At the Faculty Councils 11th meeting of the year, Professor William Fash (anthropology) and Professor William Kirby (history) presented the Report on Study Abroad prepared by the Facultys Standing Committee on Out-of-Residence Study. 
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Campus & CommunityAuthors, authors!The sixth annual Celebration of Faculty and Staff Authors at the Graduate School of Education was held at the Gutman Library on March 8. This gala event, sponsored by the Deans Office, honored 32 GSE authors who published books or created multimedia productions during the past year. The occasion also marked the 82nd anniversary of… 
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Science & TechJungle ordeal leads to surprise treasureWilliam Saturno was hot, frustrated, low on food, low on water, and low on patience when he sought shade in a trench dug by looters at the San Bartolo archaeological… 
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Science & TechNanowire used to sense cancer markerProfessor Charles Lieber and his students have made wires whose thinness is measured in atoms instead of fractions of an inch. That allowed Lieber’s team to develop what is likely… 
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Science & TechScientists predict calmer weather aheadWhen the Sun is more active, it has bad effects on our planet. For instance, energy from solar eruptions changes the orbits of satellites, causing them to spiral back to… 
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Campus & CommunityWomen’s basketball on way to NCAA’sDespite the numbers – 13 straight wins and a No. 13 seed – its not luck thats taken the Harvard womens basketball team to its 4th appearance at the NCAA Tournament this Saturday (March 16) in Chapel Hill, N.C. That fact can be squarely blamed on forward Hana Peljto 04 and center Reka Cserny 05.… 
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Campus & CommunityRobert Nozick memorial service is set for March 21Robert Nozick, Pellegrino University Professor, will be remembered at a memorial service next Thursday, March 21, 2 p.m., in the Memorial Church. A reception will follow at the Faculty Club. 
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Campus & CommunityKnitting neighborsFrom National Public Radio to pierced teenagers in the yarn store, everyone knows that knitting is suddenly cool. Its the new yoga, says one magazine article its part of a post-Sept. 11 trend toward cocooning, say psychologists. 
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Campus & CommunityPeace in the heart, peace in the worldTerrorism can be located in the human heart. Soft-spoken Vietnamese Buddhist monk Thich Nhat Hanh spoke these words to a hushed crowd at the Memorial Church March 8. We can remove terrorism from the human heart through the practice of deep listening. Deep listening can help remove wrong perceptions. 
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Campus & CommunityPublish or perish, but where?Since 1985, Harvard libraries increased spending on serial publications by 162 percent, while the total number of serials they purchased rose only 7 percent. Part of this disparity reflects the addition of electronic versions of journals, yet it also represents the expanding gap between the price of information and the ability of libraries to purchase… 
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Campus & CommunityDesigning womenWhen Gweneth Newman and Katherine Alberg Anderson decided to enter a design competition as a final project in their course on watershed management, they had no idea that they would end up $5,000 richer. 
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Campus & Community‘War of the Worlds’ wows againMartians battled humanity at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) Thursday night (March 7), and, to the delight of a partisan home crowd, the humans won. 
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Campus & CommunityNCI awards grant for Molecular Target LaboratoryThe National Cancer Institute has awarded Harvard a $40 million chemistry grant to develop a laboratory that will dramatically enhance researchers ability to find the proteins involved in disease and identify agents that can manipulate them. 
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Campus & CommunityJournalists speak out at Russian conferenceRussian journalists struggling to maintain freedom of expression found an influential ally last month – Harvard University. 
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Campus & Community‘Worldly’ education assessedCan the nations oldest university, one with its roots sunk deep in American soil, embrace globalization? And what does this buzzword of globalization mean for education beyond swapping students across national borders? 
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Campus & CommunityAcademy takes temperature of medical teachingIn an effort to improve medical teaching in an era when research is king and technology and societal changes are dramatically revising what it means to be a doctor, Harvard Medical School is launching an organization to recognize and support its best teachers and to innovate in medical education. 
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Campus & CommunityLiterary luminaries cut through FoggThree of the 21st centurys foremost writers of English gathered at Harvard March 8 to read from their works. Sponsored by the Harvard Advocate, Americas oldest college literary magazine, the event featured poet John Ashbery 49, and prose writers Jamaica Kincaid and Salman Rushdie. 
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Campus & CommunityNew center takes aim at brain diseaseA new Harvard center is taking aim at neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimers, Parkinsons, Huntingtons, and Lou Gehrigs disease, using a collaborative approach and a combination of weapons to foster research aimed at advancing knowledge about the diseases and quickly applying that knowledge to the needs of patients. 
 
							 
							