Campus & Community
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						  Leading FAS in period of major challenges, opportunity for changeHopi Hoekstra details what she’s learned in first two years as dean, her moves to strengthen funding, academics, admissions, and expand aid 
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						  Pritzker sees an institution meeting the momentSenior fellow stresses core principles, Corporation engagement, constructive dialogue as University navigates ‘period of severe challenge’ 
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						  Harvard appoints four University ProfessorsDulac, Feldman, Goldin, and Vafa honored with highest faculty distinction 
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						  Class of 2029 yield tops 83%, with international students at 90%Nearly half will pay no tuition 
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						  All good, except grape pizzaUniversity Dining Services directors talk menus, special diets, financial and practical challenges of serving up 2.9 million meals per year 
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						  Looks like a book. Reads, to some, like a threat.Houghton exhibit explores forbidden history 
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							Garber welcomed as provostAt a welcoming reception, Harvard President Drew Faust relayed the praise she received for incoming Provost Alan M. Garber ’76 throughout her search for a replacement for Steven E. Hyman.   
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							Warrior spiritFive years ago, Andrew Kinard lost his legs in Iraq. After 75 surgeries, he’s tackling other big goals, from a Harvard education to the Boston Marathon.   
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							William Lipscomb dies at 91William Nunn Lipscomb Jr., emeritus professor and winner of the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1976, died at age 91 in Cambridge, Mass., on Thursday (April 14) of pneumonia and other complications resulting after a fall.   
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							Alan Garber named provostPresident Drew Faust announced that Alan M. Garber ’76, the Henry J. Kaiser Jr. Professor, and professor of medicine and economics at Stanford University, will become the next provost of Harvard University.   
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							OFA awards 14 undergraduate artistsThe Office for the Arts at Harvard and the Office of the Dean for the Arts and Humanities have announced the recipients of the 2011 Artist Development Fellowship. 
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							Harvard scientist wins Sackler PrizeHarvard Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology and of Physics Xiaowei Zhuang has been awarded the Raymond and Beverly Sackler International Prize in Biophysics, awarded at Tel Aviv University. 
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							Faculty Council meeting held April 13At its twelfth meeting of the year, the Faculty Council heard proposals regarding the description of the Standing Committee on Public Service, study abroad in Freiburg, and the description of the Standing Committee on the Library. 
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							Grosz leaving Radcliffe deanshipBarbara J. Grosz, dean of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, will step down at the end of this academic year. She will spend next year at Stanford University before returning to the Harvard faculty.   
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							Sustaining the momentumFrom a Medical School team that switched to reusable materials to trim waste to a Business School move to make its executive education programs sustainable, teams and individuals from around the University were recognized for their efforts to make Harvard greener in the annual Green Carpet Awards.   
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							More than a gameThe Harvard men’s soccer team and the Haitian National Team played to a 0-0 tie before more than 11,000 fans at Harvard Stadium Sunday afternoon. Following regulation, the Crimson and Haiti settled the contest in penalty kicks, with the Haitians winning 4-1.   
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							Reischauer Institute seeks papersThe Edwin O. Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies seeks submissions for its 2011 Noma-Reischauer Prizes in Japanese Studies, given to the undergraduate and graduate students with the best essays on Japan-related topics. 
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							Creative Foundation honors Shalini PammalShalini Pammal ’13 received the Creativity Foundation’s 2011 Legacy Medal for her exceptional creative promise in public service. 
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							Two named Truman ScholarsNiha Jain ’12 and classmate Anthony Hernandez have been named Truman Scholars as college juniors who have demonstrated “exceptional leadership potential” and who are “committed to careers in government, the nonprofit or advocacy sectors, education or elsewhere in the public service.”   
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							Harvard wins big at ECO AwardsThe CommuterChoice Program and Harvard Medical School were recently recognized among recipients of the first annual Excellence in Commuter Options (ECO) awards. 
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							‘Truly inspirational’The Harvard Foundation has named Maggie Werner-Washburne the 2011 Scientist of the Year.   
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							‘Arise, My People’The Kuumba Singers of Harvard College will lift up the voices of black spirituality and creativity at the 41st Annual Dean Archie C. Epps Spring Concert, “Arise, My People,” on April 16. 
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							HKS appoints Bohnet academic deanIris Bohnet, professor of public policy, has been named the new academic dean at Harvard Kennedy School. 
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							How inviting!The Common Spaces Chairs Project has returned those colorful chairs to the Yard and booked events through the month of April.   
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							John J. Collins Jr.At Harvard Medical School, John J. Collins Jr. was appointed Assistant in Surgery in 1968 and rose steadily through the academic ranks, serving as Professor of Surgery from 1977 until his retirement as Professor of Surgery, Emeritus in 1999.   
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							Abraham FreedbergAbraham Freedberg had a long and illustrious medical career at Harvard. He was outstanding in all the metrics of academic excellence. In addition to his research, teaching and patient care, Al (Freedberg preferred to be called Al or A. Stone) had a multidimensional fourth quality that set him apart. 
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							J. Richard GaintnerIn 1983, J. Richard Gaintner joined the faculty of Harvard Medical School where he rose to Professor of Medicine. 
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							Planting a research center in the arboretumWith the opening of the Weld Hill facility at Arnold Arboretum, staff members and lab equipment are filling the long-awaited space dedicated to botanical research.   
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							At college, but almost homeWhen freshman Anna Kelsey realizes she needs something from home, she just walks seven minutes to get it.   
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							A look inside: Currier HouseThe crest of Currier House shows a field of red, representing Harvard, surrounding a simple golden tree. Within their own communal “tree,” Currier residents have been “greening” the way they live.   
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							On the goFreshmen Morgan Powell and Mariah Pewarski balance schoolwork with playing two sports — and wouldn’t have it any other way.   
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							Robert M. GoldwynRobert M. Goldwyn graduated from Harvard Medical School and later returned there and became Senior Surgeon at the Peter Bent Brigham and Beth Israel Hospitals. 
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							A moving tributeFriends and colleagues offered heartfelt remembrances during a memorial service for the Rev. Peter J. Gomes.   
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							Long a Harvardian, now an AmericanFor Marina Betancur and 15 other Harvard employees, a celebration dinner with President Drew Faust was a victory lap on a long, arduous, and rewarding path to citizenship.   
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							Faust named 40th Jefferson LecturerDrew Faust, eminent historian and president of Harvard University, will deliver the 2011 Jefferson Lecture in the Humanities on May 2.   
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							Belfer Center hosts 2011 Fisher FellowsThe Future of Diplomacy Project at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, located at the Harvard Kennedy School, announced the spring 2011 Fisher Family Fellows on April 4. 
 
							 
							