Tag: Harvard History
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Campus & CommunityThis Month in Harvard historySept. 19, 1639 — Accused of neglecting and physically mistreating students, Nathaniel Eaton is fined and discharged as Master of the College by the Great and General Court of Massachusetts Bay Colony. Harvard closes its doors and dismisses students after little more than a year’s operation. 
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Campus & CommunityFaust inauguration takes shapeThe inauguration of Drew Faust as Harvard’s 28th president will feature time-honored tradition — ancient artifacts and silver — world music, and talk of tomorrow’s promise. 
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Campus & CommunityThis month in Harvard historyJune 1913 — Having proved itself during a five-year experimental period, the Business School emerges from the Faculty of Arts and Sciences to become an independent graduate school. 
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Campus & CommunityThe year in reviewAs Commencement crowns another year of Harvard history, here is a brief backward glance at some of the year’s highlights. 
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Campus & CommunityPersonal glimpses into Harvard historySince its founding in 1636, Harvard has moved through many great historical dramas. History as a listing of events — as chronicle — has its uses, but often more insight is gained through personal accounts. Great events and small can often be better understood in the light of private recollections. 
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Campus & CommunityThis month in Harvard historyMay 1976 — Before an overflow crowd in Sanders Theatre, Senior Professor John H. Finley Jr. — the legendary 72-year-old Eliot Professor of Greek Literature Emeritus — gives his final Harvard lecture in “Humanities 103: The Great Age of Athens.” 
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Campus & CommunityThis month in Harvard historyMay 25, 1951 — The Medical School attracts some 250 graduates to its first Alumni Day. 
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Arts & CultureTreasures of Dental School’s old museum opened wide at exhibitThe Harvard Dental Museum once held 14,000 specimens, everything from Ralph Waldo Emerson’s dentures to a prehistoric mastodon’s tusk measuring 11 feet in length and weighing 300 pounds. 
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Campus & CommunityGreen milestones1991: University Committee on the Environment established to encourage and coordinate University-wide environment-related activities and scholarship. 
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Campus & CommunityNew department approvedThe Harvard Corporation has approved, with the support of the deans of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) and the Harvard Medical School (HMS), the establishment of a new Department of Developmental and Regenerative Biology, the first academic department in Harvard’s 371-year history to be based in more than one of the University’s Schools.… 
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Campus & CommunitySEAS debuts new seal, which captures the idea of ‘coming full circle’Harvard’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) announced the debut of its new seal earlier this week. The design is based on the seal created for the Harvard School of Engineering in 1936 by Pierre de Chaignon la Rose (class of 1895). 
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Campus & CommunityThis month in Harvard historyMarch 5, 1954 — The Faculty of Arts and Sciences approves the Special Standing Program recently proposed by the Educational Policy Committee. The program allows specially qualified high-school students who have completed 11th grade to enter as freshmen, specially qualified freshmen to enter as advanced-standing sophomores, and honors candidates to have one or two required… 
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Campus & CommunityRichard Alden HowardOn the last day in May, 1962, Professor Richard Howard received the following civil subpoena: “You are hereby commanded to appear in the United States District Court [and to] bring with you the entire card catalog of all books, pamphlets, monographs etc. now located in the Administration Building at Arnold Arboretum, Jamaica Plain.” 
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Campus & CommunityPortrait unveilingThe late Eileen Jackson Southern, a music scholar and Harvard’s first black female tenured professor, is the subject of the latest painting in the Minority Portraiture Project, established in 2002 by the Harvard Foundation for Intercultural and Race Relations. 
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Campus & CommunityThis month in Harvard historyFeb. 12, 1974 – The Faculty of Arts and Sciences approves a three-year trial for a new undergraduate honors concentration in the Comparative Study of Religion, limited to 10 students per year. 
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Campus & CommunityJudaica Division awarded $1M grantIn 1930, Lucius N. Littauer, Class of 1878, presented his first gift to the Harvard College Library, beginning a tradition of extraordinary support of the library’s Judaica Division. 
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Arts & CultureThe many lives of Henry Wadsworth LongfellowMost of us only get one life. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow – whose 200th birthday bicentennial is this month – has had four. In the first, he arrived in Cambridge in 1837, fresh from a six-year professorship at Bowdoin College. Longfellow, sporting long hair, yellow gloves, and flowered waistcoats, cut quite a romantic, European-style figure in… 
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Campus & CommunityPortrait of former Dean of the College L. Fred Jewett is unveiledThe Harvard Foundation for Intercultural and Race Relations has unveiled a seventh portrait in its Minority Portraiture Project. 
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Campus & CommunityStiller, Johansson named Hasty Pudding’s Man and Woman of YearThe Hasty Pudding Theatricals of Harvard University has announced that Ben Stiller and Scarlett Johansson are the recipients of the 2007 Man and Woman of the Year awards. 
 
							 
							