Year: 2001
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Campus & Community
Analysis: ‘Mad Cow’ not dire threat to U.S.
Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE, or Mad Cow disease) has not been detected in the United States. The first major analysis of what would happen if BSE were introduced into the United States finds that there is little chance that the disease will be a serious threat either to the American cattle herd or to public…
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Campus & Community
Five Harvard students named 2002 Rhodes Scholarship winners
SPECIAL TO THE GAZETTE 12/10/01 Five Harvard University students were selected as Rhodes Scholars, giving Harvard the most scholars in the nation, the scholarship trust announced Sunday, Dec. 9. The…
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Campus & Community
Two Harvard students named 2002 Marshall Scholarship winners
SPECIAL TO THE GAZETTE 12/6/01 Lauren Baer and Sarah Moss, both Harvard College seniors, have won Marshall Scholarships. The prestigious scholarships allow young American leaders to study at a university…
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Campus & Community
Lithium drugs found to reduce suicide risk
SPECIAL TO THE GAZETTE 12/12/01 Lithium drugs may reduce the risk of suicide among people with severe recurrent depression by as much as 82 percent, according to a new Harvard…
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Campus & Community
Goodbye, Mr. Chips
If you asked most college students at most colleges to name their favorite class, chances are the words “freshman chemistry” wouldn’t come up all that often. On the other hand,…
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Campus & Community
Reading for the blind
Michele Shirasu-Hiza sits in what looks like a phone booth with the lights on, talking to herself.
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Campus & Community
Panel: Actions, not promises, key to peace
Laying the groundwork for an effective new national governmental infrastructure in Afghanistan will require a thoughtful, sustained, and integrated international effort.
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Campus & Community
Long view needed in Afghanistan
The toughest problem facing the U.S.-led operation in Afghanistan is not bombs, bunkers, or refugees, but the depth of its own resolve, according to former Institute of Politics Director and former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Jonathan Moore.
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Campus & Community
Claims to antiquity
When Harvard’s founders committed themselves to a “learned ministry” for the New World, they could hardly have imagined study carrels with dataports or periodicals like Syzygy: Journal of Alternative Religion…
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Campus & Community
These creatures see dusty duty
While the rarity and beauty of Harvard’s Glass Flowers have won them fame and made them the Harvard Museum of Natural History’s (HMNH) most popular exhibit, the glass animals exist…
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Campus & Community
Looking back on a semester darkened by Sept. 11
As the academic year began this fall, the annual rites of passage from high school to college, from vacation back to school, were rendered indelible by the events of Sept.…
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Campus & Community
Whitney Espich joins Radcliffe
Whitney Espich, a former manager at Citigate Cunningham and the former communications officer at Monticello, has been appointed director of communications at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study.
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Campus & Community
Law students listen to panel about challenges of work, family
At Harvard Law School (HLS), where many students are training for careers that will put astonishing demands on their time, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Hedrick Smith moderated a discussion Thursday evening (Nov. 29) that focused tightly on the demands of law careers. Smiths latest public television documentary, Juggling Work and Family With Hedrick Smith, devotes a…
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Campus & Community
Tea for one
Tara McAllister, this years winner of the Tazuko Ajiro Monane Prize, sits in the Japanese Tea House at 5 Bryant St. The prize is awarded each year to an outstanding student of Japanese who has completed at least two years of Japanese language study at Harvard. McAllister will be honored at a private reception on…
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Campus & Community
Summers: Biomedical revolution at hand
The next Silicon Valley could well be in Boston, but it is likely to be heading a biomedical rather than a computer revolution, Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers predicted Thursday (Nov. 29) in a speech before about 300 doctors, researchers, and other medical personnel at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.
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Campus & Community
Kids, too, benefit from recent AIDS therapies
In the first prospective study in the United States to look at the effect of combination therapy that includes protease inhibitors on HIV-1 infected children and adolescents, researchers from the Pediatric AIDS Clinical Trials Group (PACTG) and the Harvard School of Public Health (SPH) found that mortality rates among the study participants were dramatically reduced.…
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Campus & Community
Murphy named ‘Coach of the Year’
Coach Tim Murphy, who guided the Ivy League Champion Harvard football team to its first undefeated, untied season since 1913, has been named New England Division I-AA Coach of the Year by the New England Sportswriters Association. This is Murphys third selection as Coach of the Year and is his second honor as the Crimson…
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Campus & Community
Newsmakers
Hill selected for New Century program Allan G. Hill, Andelot Professor of Demography at the School of Public Health (SPH), was recently selected for the newly created Fulbright New Century…
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Campus & Community
Fish story
If Theodore Bestor had gotten his way when he was 15, he wouldnt be where he is today.
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Campus & Community
Memorial service set for Spevack
Edmund Spevack, a former Harvard lecturer on history and literature, passed away in his native Muenster, Germany, on July 2, 2001, after a lengthy battle with cancer. He was 38.
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Campus & Community
Rally calls for higher wages for janitors
Miranda Worthen 01 joins a Nov. 30 rally organized by the national organization Justice for Janitors. The group has held periodic demonstrations in the area. Staff photo by Justin Ide
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Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
Dec. 9, 1788 – From the Journal of Disorders of Eliphalet Pearson, the Hancock Professor of Hebrew and Other Oriental Languages: Disorders coming out of chapel. Also in the hall at breakfast the same morning. Bisket, tea cups, saucers, and a KNIFE thrown at the tutors. [. . .] – From this day to 13…
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Campus & Community
HUPD is on the lookout for Shaler Lane burglary suspect
On Wednesday, Nov. 28, at approximately 9 a.m., a resident of Shaler Lane observed a white male, around 60 years old, enter and exit the residents unlocked townhouse. The suspect, described as having white hair and wearing a black waist-length raincoat, remained inside the residence for approximately two minutes. He then exited the residence and…
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Campus & Community
Student from Zimbabwe wins International Rhodes
Karin Alexander of Lowell House is a winner of an International Rhodes Scholarship. Alexander plans to further her work in social studies, in which she concentrated, during her time at…
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Campus & Community
New tissue built from fetal cells
They see some of the world’s worst birth defects at Children’s Hospital in Boston. Dario Fauza remembers a “big beautiful boy” born with a normal heart outside of his body.…
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Campus & Community
Single enzyme may be linked to obesity
The increased activity of a single enzyme in fat cells may be a common cause of obesity and obesity-linked diseases, including diabetes, according to an animal study conducted by researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and the University of Edinburgh and published in the Dec. 7 issue of Science. The findings could eventually pave…
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Campus & Community
Daylight savings
The increased activity of a single enzyme in fat cells may be a common cause of obesity and obesity-linked diseases, including diabetes, according to an animal study conducted by researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and the University of Edinburgh and published in the Dec. 7 issue of Science. The findings could eventually pave…