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Campus & Community
Newsmakers
Holloway to meet with Nobel Laureates The Department of Energy has selected Ayana Holloway, GSAS, as one of 31 outstanding research participants to attend the 51st convention of Nobel laureates…
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Campus & Community
FMO ready to recycle during move-out
Thanks to the cooperative efforts of the University community and Harvard Facilities Maintenance Operations (FMO), a record 1,590 tons of paper have been recycled through the 2001 fiscal year. Now, with student move-out and Commencement just around the corner, FMO will be sponsoring several different efforts over the next few weeks to reduce the amount…
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Campus & Community
Local 26 enters five-year agreement
The University and the union representing Harvard dining service and Faculty Club workers, HEREIU Local 26 (Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International Union) have entered into a new five-year collective bargaining agreement. The agreement, which was ratified by union members last week, will become effective on June 20. Under its terms, the 500 workers employed…
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Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
May 6, 1945 At noon a novel contraption appears on high as a helicopter hovers over Harvard and lands on the riverbank in front of the Business School. A…
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Campus & Community
Three new appointments at the A.R.T.
Harvard President Neil L. Rudenstine announced today the appointments of Robert Woodruff as artistic director, Gideon Lester as associate artistic director/dramaturg, and Robert J. Orchard as executive director of the American Repertory Theatre (A.R.T.) to take effect in August 2002.
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Campus & Community
Einar Haugen
He took genuine pleasure in befriending people and making lesser lights feel at ease. He loved teaching and was always surrounded by students.
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Campus & Community
Master helps others harness ‘chi’ for health and healing
With a devoted following among students, staff, and faculty, and sworn testimonials of increased dexterity, relaxation, and balance of body and mind, the meditative practice of tai chi is a force to be reckoned with. So much in fact, that the Harvard Crimson selected classes in tai chi – which is said to foster the…
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Campus & Community
Cycling team goes to nationals, but misses out on trophy
The Harvard Cycling Team came back from Colorado trophy-less but energized by their first-ever trip to the National Collegiate Road Cycling Championships in Colorado Springs.
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Campus & Community
Rockefeller Center awards nearly 100 grants
The David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies (DRCLAS) has awarded 58 research grants and 39 internship grants to Harvard undergraduate and graduate students. Research and internship grant recipients, which…
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Campus & Community
HR Project approved to implement HR, payroll, benefits systems
The Harvard Corporation has approved plans for the Human Resources (HR) Project, which by April 2002 will implement improved computer systems for human resources, payroll, benefits, and time collection. The project will use PeopleSoft applications hosted and maintained by an outside application service provider. This approval constitutes the final step in a series of reviews…
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Campus & Community
China Project honors alumnus Gilbert Butler
The University Center for the Environment (HUCE) hosted a reception for Gilbert Butler Jr. ’59 honoring his generous support of the China Project – Harvard’s multidisciplinary research program on energy…
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Campus & Community
Special notice regarding Commencement exercises, June 7
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 on Commencement Morning: Degree…
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Campus & Community
Oldest mammal is found:
Discovery of the skull of a shrewlike animal the size of a paper clip pushes back the origin of mammals, including humans, to 195 million years ago. Found in China, the tiny skull shows evidence that the first mammals evolved from reptiles 45 million years earlier than widely believed.
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Science & Tech
Oldest mammal is found
When dinosaurs ruled the world, scampering around their feet were platoons of diminutive insect-eating animals, part reptile, part something new. When the giant reptiles and many other animals were wiped…
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Health
Breast-feeding may limit teenage obesity
Infants who were breast-fed more than formula-fed, or who were breast-fed for longer periods, had approximately 20 percent lower risk of being overweight in their preteen and teen years, according…
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Campus & Community
Math As a Civil Rights Issue:
Robert Moses was a young man when he traveled from New York to Mississippi in the early 1960s. The voter registration movement he helped organize changed the political landscape of…
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Campus & Community
Unlocking the Internet’s Library
Here is a computer, and here is an assignment: log on and find out something interesting about Australia. Do you search using the key word Australia? Or do you search using Australia+money+food+school+sports+cooking+climate?
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Campus & Community
Breaking the Glass Ceiling…Online
When Pam Whitehouse, an HGSE doctoral student and adjunct professor at the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth, put her Womens Studies 101 course online four years ago, she got a lot of resistance from her colleagues. The Web didnt jibe with long-held ideologies that womens studies courses must focus on face-to-face discussion and community, said…
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Campus & Community
Teaching for Empathy
Many Harvard students look at Mohammed Rehman every day, but they dont really see him. They may exchange a couple of dollars with him as they buy their morning paper at the Out of Town News stand in Harvard Square. But to truly see Mohammed Rehman, one must understand the country he left, his long…
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Campus & Community
Building Computerized Cathedrals for Learning
Art historian, religious scholar, and computer virtuoso, James Moore has always been interested in the lessons that things-inanimate objects, that is-can teach. Now in the fourth year of his doctoral studies at HGSE, he has focused on a quintessentially modern medium: the Internet.
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Campus & Community
Memorial Minute: Robert Harris Chapman
At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on April 10, 2001, the following Minute was placed upon the records. Robert Harris Chapman, Professor of English Literature, playwright,…
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Campus & Community
FAS admissions yield is close to 80 percent
Bolstered by a financial aid program that has been expanded twice in the past two years, the yield on students admitted to the College remains at high levels not seen since the early 1970s. The high yield means that only a small number will be admitted from the waiting list over the next few weeks,…
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Campus & Community
Breast-fed babies less likely to be obese later
More months on breast milk as infants may mean fewer pounds on older children and teens later, according to a Harvard Medical School study in the May 16 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
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Campus & Community
Muses’ return
Imagine a time in the remote future when all that is known of our world is what archaeologists have been able to excavate from the rubble – a handful of tantalizing puzzles with most of the pieces missing.
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Campus & Community
In Brief
Employment Office to host Career Forum The Employment Office will host Career Forum 2001 on Tuesday, June 12. This year’s event will be held from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.…
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Campus & Community
Rudenstine’s journey to Harvard began at 14:
At the age of 14, Neil Rudenstine set out on an epic journey. Physically, the distance was only a few miles, but in personal terms it was like traveling to another world.
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Campus & Community
The Long Road to College Access
Education professor Bridget Terry Long, poised with an economists training, is zeroing in on an education question thats always intrigued her: What factors determine who goes to college and who does not?
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Campus & Community
Unchartered Time for the American Child
The percentage of mothers working outside the home has almost doubled in the United States since 1975. As a consequence, more American families than ever depend on nonmaternal care for…
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Campus & Community
Science sleuths
There was a kidnapping in Science Center B on Friday, May 11. But thanks to the speedy forensic work of some elementary school students, the crime was solved by days end.