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  • Digital grindstone

    Suchanan Tambunlertchai 04 concentrates intently in Lamont Library, where she has plenty of company as students prepare for exams.

  • New research: Have light, will not travel

    Physicists at Harvard University have created a pulse of light that contains photons, is compressed to fit within several centimeters of space, and does not travel. The finding builds upon earlier demonstrations of stored light by halting actual photons, not just their signature.

  • In brief

    Faust to offer insight on PBS program Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study Dean Drew Gilpin Faust, who is also professor of history, will share her scholarly insight as a historian…

  • New sculptures, new landscape

    Sun Gate, a bronze sculpture weighing half a ton, arrived one day in the back of a pickup truck driven by artist Murray Dewart 70. Dewart and his assistant, aided by a group of undergraduates, rolled the piece down the ramp and into place at the exact center of McKinlock Courtyard at Leverett House, where it seemed to command the space as though the architectural setting had been designed to receive it.

  • ‘Trays’ in Gund Hall serve up design delights

    Abby Feldman has a Laurel and Hardy screen saver with photos that change every five seconds or so. There are the boys in Sons of the Desert. There they are in Another Fine Mess, Way Out West, Babes in Toyland.

  • Standing Committees – 2003-2004

    Upon the recommendation of the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, the President approved and announced the following Standing Committees at the F.A.S. Faculty Meeting of October 21, 2003. Standing Committees of the Faculty are constituted to perform a continuing function. Each committee has been established by a vote of the Faculty, and can be dissolved only by a vote of the Faculty or, with the agreement of a particular Committee, by the Dean and Faculty Council. The Dean recommends the membership of each committee annually.

  • Crimson turns blue

    Its not every Harvard class that opens with a standing ovation.

  • Abram Bergson

    At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on November 18, 2003, the following Minute was placed upon the records.

  • Feeling a little blue

    It’s not every Harvard class that opens with a standing ovation. But then, most Harvard classes aren’t launched with the introduction, “The king of the blues, B.B. King!”

  • Guiding the light fantastic on silica wire ‘rails’

    Marrying fiber optics with nanotechnology, scientists at Harvard University have created silica wires that are far narrower than the wavelength of light yet can still guide a light beam with great precision. The wires, about a thousandth the width of a human hair, function with minimal signal loss even when their walls accommodate well under half the breadth of a single light pulse.

  • Joe Lieberman connects at ‘Hardball’

    Describing Saddam Hussein as a ticking time bomb who had destabilized the Middle East and represented a serious threat to the United States, Connecticut Sen. Joseph Lieberman reiterated his support for the U.S. invasion of Iraq at a Dec. 15 live broadcast of MSNBCs Hardball from the John F. Kennedy Jr. Forum.

  • Picturing a universe that’s out of sight

    Giovanni Fazio, a senior physicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, directed the design and construction of a camera that is looking beyond the visible universe to see planets, stars,…

  • New task forces tap Harvard expertise to advance next phase of Allston planning

    Faculty task forces with representation from across the University will help shape the next phase of planning for a future campus in Allston. The four task forces are charged with discussing, and ultimately sharpening, the preliminary academic framework outlined in President Lawrence H. Summers October letter to the Harvard community.

  • China premier comes to Harvard

    Capping his first-ever visit to the United States with a talk at Harvard University yesterday (Dec. 10), Wen Jiabao, premier of the Peoples Republic of China, drew upon Chinas rich cultural past and current atmosphere of openness to predict a bright future of development, economic wealth, and democracy.

  • CCSR annual report is available

    The 2003 Annual Report of the Corporation Committee on Shareholder Responsibility (CCSR), a subcommittee of the President and Fellows, is now available upon request from the Office for the Committees on Shareholder Responsibility. Please call (617) 495-0985 to request copies.

  • Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending Dec. 6. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Start year off right

    President Lawrence H. Summers will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office on the following dates:

  • First snowful

    An aerial view of Eliot Tower as seen from Lowell House. The Yard and its environs look all spiffed up by the regions first snow, a mighty storm that hit the East Coast well in advance of the official beginning of winter.

  • Community Gifts reaches out a special hand to area hungry

    Harvards Community Gifts Campaign is a way for Harvard employees to help the city of Boston meet a critical need for food donations.

  • Go to bed! say experts at pajama party panel

    They packed Ticknor Lecture Room in Boylston Hall, some wearing pajamas, some snuggling beneath blankets. They drank warm milk and ate cookies. They listened to soothing music.

  • Sperm cells made in laboratory can fertilize eggs

    Scientists know that stem cells from embryos have the potential to develop into brain, bone, or any other type cell, but getting them to actually do this in a laboratory is a different thing. Now, for the first time, researchers have crossed this bridge by coaxing uncommitted stem cells to grow into sperm cells in a petri dish.

  • Mental health task force announced

    Provost Steven Hyman and Dean of Harvard College Benedict Gross have announced a task force on mental health that will include clinicians, students, and faculty. The purpose of the task force is to develop a plan to increase education about, and decrease stigma around, mental and emotional problems as well as to provide an optimum environment both for detecting and treating these problems early on.

  • Seniors steam UNH

    A strong outing for Harvards seniors propelled the womens hockey team past New Hampshire, 4-0, on Tuesday night (Dec. 9) at the Bright Hockey Center. Lauren McAuliffe and Angela Ruggiero – two of the teams three seniors – posted a goal and an assist each as the No. 3 Crimson earned its seventh shutout to stay perfect on the season (11-0-0). The victory extends what was already the programs best start ever.

  • Linguist Linda

    Linda Wanlin Zhang 06, winner of this years Tazuko Ajiro Monane Award, views Japanese books and artwork inside the Houghton Librarys Yenching Library Exhibition, which celebrates the 75th year of the Harvard-Yenching Library and highlights its special collections. The Tazuko Ajiro Monane Prize is awarded each year to an outstanding student of Japanese who has completed at least two years of Japanese language study at Harvard. This monetary award is sponsored by the Tazuko Ajiro Monane Memorial Fund, and is hosted by the Japanese Language Program in the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations.

  • Tellers of tale talk at Nieman narrative conference

    More than half of the weekends 23 inches of snow had fallen, and, with the wind launching most of it at me, I climbed over a knee-high drift to free myself from the shin-high swell blanketing the sidewalk. Walking on the street allowed for some speed, and the circumstances demanded speed. It was close to 8 oclock on Saturday night, the seasons first storm was trapping people indoors, and my notebook, filled with two days worth of quotes, notes, and observations, was still at the Hyatt Regency Cambridge where the Nieman Conference on narrative journalism was taking place all weekend – and I wasnt.

  • Faculty panel sets the stage for what’s to come

    Moderator Roderick MacFarquhar, Anthony Saich, Regina Abrami, and Alastair Iain Johnston participated in the faculty panel on China that preceded yesterday’s (Dec. 10) visit of China’s Premier Wen Jiabao.

  • Clark gives Bush the business

    This is the last in a series of interviews with Democratic presidential candidates.

  • Small, vocal groups protest Wen’s visit

    Chants of China lie! People die! and Hands off Taiwan! echoed across Western Avenue in Allston Wednesday (Dec. 10) as about 85 demonstrators sent a message to Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao to improve human rights, stop sabre-rattling over Taiwan, and get out of Tibet.

  • University readies for Wen Jiabao

    Premier Wen Jiabaos visit to Harvard lasted just a few hours, but preparations for the occasion spanned nearly a month. Wens Harvard hosts – the Office of the President, the Harvard University Asia Center, and the Fairbank Center for East Asian Research – worked alongside hundreds of faculty, staff, and volunteers from around the University to plan and execute the visit. The University Marshals office managed protocol Transportation Services shuttled audience members across the river to the Business School campus the Harvard University Police Department coordinated the security forces of the U.S. and Chinese governments as well as the Boston Police the Harvard News Office corralled the 70-some members of the media expected to attend the event and Harvard Business School (HBS) opened its campus and facilities while ensuring the event didnt interfere with its students final exams.

  • Augusto Boal’s ‘Theatre of the Oppressed’

    Oppression, according to Augusto Boal, is when one person is dominated by the monologue of another and has no chance to reply. Boals life is devoted to giving those who are in this one-down position the tools with which to express themselves and discover a way out of their powerlessness.