Year: 2022
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Nation & WorldStruggling to ‘hold up the sky’A Q&A with Luiz Eloy Terena, a Brazilian Indigenous lawyer and a land-rights activist who took part in a panel on the effects of illegal gold mining in the Amazon on public health, the environment, and Indigenous rights.  
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Nation & WorldNo return to CamelotThe New Yorker’s Susan B. Glasser discusses her new book, “The Divider: Trump in the White House 2017-2021.”  
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HealthSiddhartha Mukherjee on Aristotle, COVID, and the ‘new human’Pulitzer Prize-winning physician-author Siddhartha Mukherjee returns with “The Song of the Cell.”  
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Campus & CommunityHansjörg Wyss gives 4th transformational gift to support Wyss InstituteHansjörg Wyss’ fourth gift to the Wyss Institute, $350 million, aims to transform health care and the environment by developing innovative technologies that emulate how nature builds and accelerating their translation into products.  
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Nation & World‘Right this ship of democracy’At Harvard Kennedy School, Republican Congresswoman Liz Cheney spoke about Jan. 6 and urged students not to be bystanders of American democracy.  
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Science & TechMost precise accounting yet of dark energy and dark matterAnalyzing more than two decades’ worth of supernova explosions, astrophysicists now have the most precise limits yet on the composition and evolution of the universe.  
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Work & EconomyEuropean Central Bank official sees long road aheadJoachim Nagel, president of the Deutsche Bundesbank and member of the Governing Council of the European Central Bank, says more rate hikes are needed with inflation, energy costs surging amid Russian attack on Ukraine.  
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Arts & CultureThe boy king’s throneOn the 100th anniversary of discovering Tutankhamun’s tomb, an Egyptian jewel comes to Harvard Museum of the Ancient Near East.  
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Nation & WorldYA star John Green seeks co-authors for climate story that averts disasterNew York Times bestselling author John Green was the first speaker of the 2022-2023 William Belden Noble Lecture series at the Memorial Church last Friday with a speech titled “How the World Ends.”  
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Work & EconomyIs MLB ready to compete for next generation of fans?Sports business expert discusses recent signs that pro baseball, which trails NFL, NBA, European soccer in money, popularity, may be rallying.  
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Nation & World60 years after Cuban Missile Crisis, nuclear threat feels chillingly immediateGraham Allison looks at how Kennedy and Khrushchev stepped back from the point of no return and the challenges facing the West in preventing Putin from crossing it.  
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Nation & WorldGetting schools back to pre-COVID levels misses point, Cardona urgesU.S. education secretary says pandemic revealed pre-existing problems; now is the time to fix them.  
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Science & TechLegendary Battle of Himera was triumph of Greek heroism, kind ofGenomic look at remains suggests victorious army got hand from substantial number of foreign mercenaries.  
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Nation & WorldHow to protect democracy? Don’t give up on your neighbor.Anand Giridharadas discusses his new book, “The Persuaders,” which highlights activists, political leaders, and ordinary people who haven’t given up on changing hearts and minds in the name of democracy.  
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Campus & CommunityUniversity reports jump in revenues, small decline in endowmentChief Financial Officer Tom Hollister and Executive Vice President Meredith Weenick discuss the University’s 2022 financial report and endowment returns.  
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Campus & CommunityChristopher David Killip, 74At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on Oct. 11, 2022, the following tribute to the life and service of the late Christopher David Killip was spread upon the permanent records of the Faculty. 
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Campus & CommunityGerald Enoch Sacks, 86At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on Oct. 11, 2022, the following tribute to the life and service of the late Gerald Enoch Sacks was spread upon the permanent records of the Faculty. 
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Campus & CommunityDerek Albert Pearsall, 90At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on Oct. 11, 2022, the following tribute to the life and service of the late Derek Albert Pearsall was spread upon the permanent records of the Faculty 
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Campus & CommunityDefining momentWe asked a group of first-years to tell us about themselves. Read their answers now, before they change.  
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Campus & CommunityHarvard mathematician Melanie Matchett Wood named MacArthur FellowThe mathematician, known for her work in number theory, is one of 25 recipients of this year’s “genius” grants.  
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HealthIs pandemic finally over? We asked the experts.Harvard faculty discuss changes to views on school, work, winter’s likely surge, danger of “lethal inflexibility.”  
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Science & TechBlack hole burps up shredded starFor the first time, astronomers have observed a black hole burping up stellar remains years after it shredded and consumed the star.  
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HealthBuilding ‘bravery muscles’ to fight rising anxiety among kidsHarvard psychologist says pandemic worsened trend and screening, early intervention key to avoiding bigger problems.  
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Campus & CommunityContinuing Ed Convocation is a first visit to campus for someAfter a two-year absence due to COVID-19, Harvard Extension School welcomed admitted degree candidates back to campus at an in-person Convocation ceremony.  
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Campus & CommunityWeaving a piece of Indigenous historyDiné student Keana Gorman seeks to preserve Navajo traditions, way of life.  
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Campus & Community‘Access, awareness, prevention, and support’Student mental health initiative co-chairs Giang Nguyen and Robin Glover discuss the state of their work.  
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Work & EconomyWant more diversity in corporate America? Get rid of some programsNew book by Frank Dobbin suggests getting managers actively involved instead of feeling defensive, resentful is the best way to create a more diverse corporate America.  
 
							 
							 
							

