Campus & Community
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William Paul, 94
Memorial Minute — Faculty of Arts and Sciences
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‘Truth is rarely found in echo chambers’
Faculty, staff, and students explore what it takes to connect across difference at Community and Campus Life forum
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Two new Corporation members
Sylvia Mathews Burwell and Michael S. Chae to join governing board
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‘Best college tradition anywhere’
Smurf-blue hair, chain-mail suits, vuvuzelas, and bagpipes abound as students flood Yard for annual raucous rite of Housing Day
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‘OK, I get it. This makes sense.’
Grade-inflation panel says updated plan focuses on reining in A’s, restoring integrity of system, freeing students to follow curiosity
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A community-sized Seder plate
Through sculpture’s 6 stories, Hillel seeks to portray ‘a bigger picture of what it means to be Jewish’
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College’s new financial aid initiative keeps yield near 80%
Harvards new financial aid initiative aimed at students from low and moderate economic backgrounds helped support close to an 80 percent yield on students admitted to the College Class of 2008 entering in September. Announced in February by President Lawrence H. Summers in an address to the American Council on Education, the new financial aid initiative requires no contribution from parents with incomes below $40,000 and reduces expectations from families with incomes between $40,000 and $60,000. The yield on students from families with incomes below $60,000 is just under 84 percent.
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Weissman program to send 31 interns across globe
For the past 11 years, the Weissman International Internship Program, established by Paul (52) and Harriet Weissman in 1994, has provided nearly 200 sophomores and juniors with the opportunity to participate in an international internship in a field of work related to their academic and career goals. The Weissman program enables students to develop a richer understanding of the global community in which they live and work, and provides an opportunity for them to share their experiences with the Harvard community when they return.
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The Big Picture
Instead of buying a boat or a vacation house on Cape Cod, we decided to invest in a racehorse.
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Newsmakers
Green Campus Initiative named GoGreen awardee The Harvard Green Campus Initiative (HGCI) was recently selected as a co-recipient of the GoGreen Award in the large business/institution category for energy (a…
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In brief
Directory artwork sought The Harvard Directory Project seeks artwork to be considered for the front cover of the 2004-05 Faculty & Staff Telephone Directory. Entrants must be faculty or staff…
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Good trip, bad trip
On the long road to the 2004 NCAA tennis championships, the Harvard mens and womens teams encountered a fair share of potholes and roadblocks. And success. Ultimately, the women got lost somewhere against visiting Ohio State, while the Crimson men cruised past Tulane to advance to Tulsa – the site of this years Sweet 16.
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Program takes on cutting-edge cyber law
From pornography to privacy, domain names to Napster to iTunes, Harvard Law Schools Berkman Center for Internet and Society grappled with the complex legal issues of the cybercourtroom at its three-day Internet Law Program (iLaw) last week (May 13 – 15). Some of the leading thinkers in cyber law, including Harvard Law School (HLS) faculty members William Fisher, Charles Nesson, and Berkman Assistant Professor of Entrepreneurial Legal Studies Jonathan Zittrain, presented cutting-edge, often controversial views on the ever-emerging field.
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Schlesinger Library recycles while it renovates
The Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study is a monument to preservation. The librarys extensive collections of books and manuscripts, from Julia Childs recipe files to Amelia Earharts baby book to oral histories of black women, preserve and perpetuate an understanding of womens lives for future generations of scholars.
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FAS professors honored as Cabot Fellows
Six professors in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) have been honored for their achievements in history, literature, or art, as broadly defined by the Cabot Fund. This years Walter Channing Cabot Fellows are David Blackbourn, Coolidge Professor of History Giuliana Bruno, professor of visual and environmental studies Daniel Donoghue, John P. Marquand Professor of English Michael Herzfeld, professor of anthropology Jay Jasanoff, Diebold Professor of Indo-European Linguistics and Philology and Mary Waters, Harvard College Professor and professor of sociology.
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Westhoff assails FDA on ruling
Last December, Plan B, the emergency contraceptive or morning after pill, which prevents pregnancy when taken within 72 hours of unprotected intercourse, was approved for over-the-counter sale by the Federal Drug Administrations (FDA) expert advisory panel. But the FDA, contrary to its usual practice, ruled against the panels decision and turned down Plan B for over-the-counter use. The reason given was that the drugs effect on young teenage girls had not been established.
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Case method, cyber-style
Two laptops are in use in the audience as Howard Stevenson, the Sarofim-Rock Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School, talks about participant-centered learning in the context of teaching the case method to a large audience. Stevenson was one of several presenters Tuesday (May 18) at the Workshop on the Use of Technology in Teaching and Learning, sponsored by the Harvard Academic Computing Committee, at the Business Schools Spangler Auditorium. The Harvard Academic Computing Committee is co-chaired by Harvard Provost Steven Hyman and by Assistant Provost for Information Technology and Chief Information Officer Dan Moriarty.
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O’Connor enjoys musical send-off
Thomas OConnor was handing back some unclaimed blue books when the drumming began. He looked up quizzically for a moment, then returned to his task. A teacher with as much classroom experience as OConnor was not about to be distracted by a little noise.
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Translating academic goals into physical spaces
While the faculty task forces have been considering the Universitys academic program, another working group of faculty and administrators has been working to identify a world-class planning firm to help translate the Universitys academic aspirations into physical reality.
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Task forces outline possible next steps
The task force reports require additional analysis and discussion among stakeholders before the University can move forward with some of the many options suggested:
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Harvard faculty brings Allston into focus
A vision of Harvard a half-century from now is beginning to emerge with preliminary ideas and options proposed by nearly 70 faculty members serving on four Allston task forces.
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Professional schools
From its earliest years, Harvard has trained professionals for leadership roles. Identifying how Harvards professional Schools might foster greater collaboration to educate tomorrows leaders was a key goal of the Task Force on Professional Schools.
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CID awards 30 grants to undergrads for research
The Center for International Development (CID) has awarded 30 grants to Harvard undergraduate students to support international development internships and research projects this summer.
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APS elects Dean Faust as member
Drew Gilpin Faust, dean of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, and Lincoln Professor of History at Harvard University, has been elected to membership in the American Philosophical Society (APS). Election to the APS honors extraordinary accomplishments in all fields. There are currently more than 700 APS members around the world.
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VES exhibit causes unease
Uneasy is the title of the Department of Visual Studies (VES) Thesis Exhibition and the feeling embodied in almost all the works displayed. First to greet the visitor is Grace Catenaccios glitter-loaded schoolgirl ballerina, who assumes a triumphant end-of-routine pose. Her expression is uncertain, braced for disapproval.
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Allston life
To many at Harvard, the Charles River was thought to be a potential impediment to creating an expanded campus in Allston. But according to members of the Allston Life Task Force, The main obstacle is not the physical distance, but the psychological experience of traveling between Cambridge and Allston. The river, in other words, is now seen as the likely heart of one larger campus.
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Science and technology
Harvards acreage in Allston can provide the elbow room to construct new research laboratories nurturing a host of interdisciplinary, cutting-edge science functions that embrace emerging fields and enable powerful new scientific partnerships, according to a task force studying science and technology opportunities in Allston.
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Undergraduate life
The Task Force on Undergraduate Life found that anchoring Harvards future in Allston to the undergraduate experience would be a very positive development, helping to enhance the undergraduate experience through academic, cultural, and artistic activities.
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One-third of Americans pray for their health
Mary C.’s baby was born with his intestines twisted the wrong way. She knew he would have to undergo surgery immediately. Mary, a 36-year-old Roman Catholic, e-mailed all those in her prayer circle. Within 24 hours, she had 5,000 people praying for her newborn son. The surgical team untwisted the boy’s intestine, and everything turned out fine.
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Community Gifts to help hundreds of Mass. agencies
The 2003 Community Gifts Through Harvard campaign raised nearly $900,000 for more than 650 agencies in Massachusetts.
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Clarification
In a photo caption that appeared on page 4 of the May 6 Gazette, incomplete information was provided. The third author of Harvard A to Z is Robert Shenton, now deceased. He is the former secretary of Harvards Govering Boards. The Gazette regrets the omission.
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Faculty Council meeting for May 12
At its 13th meeting of the year, the Faculty Council discussed with Joseph Badaracco, John Shad Professor of Business Ethics (HBS) and master of Currier House, chair of the Committee to Address Alcohol and Health at Harvard, the work thus far of that committee. Also present for this discussion were Grace Chang, Associate Professor of Psychiatry (HMS), and Thomas Dingman, Associate Dean of Harvard College and Allston Burr Senior Tutor in Dudley House, members of the Committee.
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This month in Harvard history
May 1904 – Harvard and MIT take a third stab at joining forces, but negotiations come to a halt in October 1905, after the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court rules unfavorably…
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Memorial services set for Kelleher, Furdon
John Kelleher service May 17 A memorial service for John V. Kelleher, professor of Irish studies emeritus in the Department of Celtic Languages and Literatures, will be held on Monday…
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Oda receives Japanese Foreign Minister’s Award
The government of Japan, in commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the U.S.-Japan Relationship, awarded a special Minister of Foreign Affairs Commendation to Yori Oda, senior preceptor in Japanese at Harvard, in a ceremony at the official residence of the Consul General of Japan in Boston May 6. The award recognizes individuals who have made significant contributions to the promotion of cultural exchange between the two countries.
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Police reports
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending May 8. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.