Campus & Community
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5 things we learned this week
How closely have you been following the Gazette? Take our quiz to find out.
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Donald Lee Fanger, 94
Memorial Minute — Faculty of Arts and Sciences
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Atul Gawande named featured speaker for Harvard Alumni Day
Acclaimed surgeon, writer, and public health leader will take the stage at Harvard’s global alumni celebration on June 6
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Sense of isolation, loss amid Gaza war sparks quest to make all feel welcome
Nim Ravid works to end polarization on campus, across multicultural democracies
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4 things we learned this week
How closely have you been following the Gazette? Take our quiz to find out.
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Abraham Verghese, physician and bestselling author, named Commencement speaker
Stanford professor whose novels include ‘Covenant of Water’ to deliver principal address May 29
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KSG’s Shorenstein Center names fall fellows
An editor of a feminist journal in Iran, a peace and disarmament correspondent, and the former editor in chief of the Financial Times are among the fellows at the Kennedy Schools Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy this semester.
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Robert D. Reischauer joins Harvard Corporation
Robert D. Reischauer ’63 has become the newest member of the Harvard Corporation, the University announced today.
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History professor named MacArthur Fellow
Professor of History Ann Blair is one of this year’s 24 MacArthur Fellows and the recipient of its $500,000
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Undergrad students develop system to fight TB:
Harvard undergraduate students, working with their professors, are developing a new technology for treating tuberculosis (TB). The new system delivers drugs through an inhaler, increasing the likelihood that patients will take them over longer periods, and reducing the side effects of pills and injections. To test and market the system, the group has formed a nonprofit corporation called MEND (MEdicine in NeeD).
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Faculty Council Notice for Sept. 25
At its second meeting of the year, the Faculty Council met with William R. Fitzsimmons (dean of Admissions and Financial Aid) and Marilyn McGrath Lewis (director of Admissions) to discuss issues surrounding Early Action and Early Admissions.
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This month in Harvard history
Sept. 25, 1929 – At the dedication of the Law School’s Langdell Hall, Harvard confers honorary Doctor of Laws degrees upon two legal scholars from Cambridge University: William Warwick Buckland and Percy Henry Winfield.
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Memorial Services
Felix M.H. Villars
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Police reports
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Sept. 21. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
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President and Provost office hours
President Lawrence H. Summers and Provost Steven Hyman will hold office hours for students in their Massachusetts Hall offices from 4 to 5 p.m. (unless otherwise noted) on the following dates:
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Ritter: Iraqi arms ‘gone’ as of ’98:
Former U.N. weapons inspector Scott Ritter said he would be willing to fight and die in a war against Iraq, as long as the United States played by international rules and attacked only after a fair inspection process revealed Baghdad had resumed production of biological, chemical, or nuclear weapons.
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Watertown, University announce agreement
The town of Watertown and Harvard University announced that after a year and a half of extensive negotiations, an agreement has been reached that will provide the town with a guaranteed revenue stream from the Arsenal on the Charles Property.
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The Big Picture
As a young boy in Calabria, Italy, Joe Calautti spent half his days in grammar school, the other half as an apprentice tailor, learning by watching the master tailors at their work.
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Endowment return stable in 2001-02
The return on Harvard University’s endowment was relatively flat during the 2001-2002 fiscal year, with investment returns dipping 0.5 percent despite what Harvard Management Company President and Chief Executive Officer Jack Meyer termed a
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In Brief
Bursztajn to lend expertise to Discovery
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Newsmakers
Eisenberg named Renaissance Woman
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Streak continues
Though it may not have been as pretty as usual, the Harvard football team scored a perfect 10 this past Saturday (Sept. 21) at the Stadium, holding off the high-flying Holy Cross Crusaders, 28-23, to claim their 10th consecutive victory over two seasons. And in spite of the seven penalties for 55 yards, or the fourth-quarter nail-biting, Harvard opened its 2002 season exhibiting the same poise that marked last year’s 9-0 campaign.
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Colloquium series looks at religion and public policy
The Joint Program on Religion and Public Life at the Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG) is sponsoring a research colloquium series beginning Oct. 3. The series, which will run through Dec. 5, aims to discuss the work of leading scholars who address the interaction of religion and public policy in the United States. Sponsors of the colloquium hope to connect and encourage graduate students working on related topics, and to strengthen the links between institutional centers of activity devoted to research and practice in this area.
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Men’s soccer dominates Hartford
Though it may not have been as pretty as usual, the Harvard football team scored a perfect 10 this past Saturday (Sept. 21) at the Stadium, holding off the high-flying Holy Cross Crusaders, 28-23, to claim their 10th consecutive victory over two seasons. And in spite of the seven penalties for 55 yards, or the fourth-quarter nail-biting, Harvard opened its 2002 season exhibiting the same poise that marked last year’s 9-0 campaign.
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Technology for the poor as well as the rich
For the worlds poor, technology is something other people have, a tool for the rich to help them get richer.
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Getting in is a personal matter
The No. 1 rule for gaining admission to a prestigious college, education writer Jacques Steinberg told an eager audience at the Graduate School of Education (GSE) Tuesday night (Sept. 24), is that there are no rules.
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Har’d Corps Service
Members of the Class of ’06 gather together for the second annual First-Year Day of Service event, co-sponsored by the Phillips Brooks House Association and Har’d Corps. The students are urged to participate in a variety of service activites at various sites in neighborhoods throughout the Greater Boston area.
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A bigger, better Harvard Guide
The new edition of The Harvard Guide, the Universitys official guidebook, is now on sale at the Harvard Events & Information Center in the Holyoke Center Arcade. The guide has a fresh new look with a cover that celebrates Commencement and Widener Library.
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Welcoming neighbors to Harvard
The Office of Government, Community and Public Affairs has updated its Welcome Guide, which provides information for Harvard’s Cambridge, Boston, and Watertown neighbors.
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Race is a refrain in Burns’ work
Ken Burns cannot tell an American story – about music, about baseball, about authors and artists, and certainly not about the Civil War – without bumping into the same issue: race.
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Summer interns work to ‘green’ Harvard
The greening of Harvard took another step forward this summer as, for the second year in a row, a group of environmentally minded interns took a hard look at Harvards buildings, vehicles, and equipment with an eye to make the campus more environment-friendly.
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HLS to hold symposium in honor of Arthur von Mehren
Harvard Law School will host a symposium exploring law and justice in a multistate world. The event will be held in honor of Story Professor of Law Emeritus Arthur Taylor von Mehrens 80th birthday. The Friday (Sept. 27) symposium will feature discussions on each of von Mehrens four areas of expertise: comparative law, choice of laws, international jurisdiction and recognition of judgments, and international arbitration. The symposium will be held in Pound Hall, second floor.
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Ah, Paris! The world capital of nostalgia:
When Patrice Higonnet was invited to teach at the College de France, a venerable Parisian institution whose free lectures are attended by everyone from street people to the haut monde, he decided to do something daring – instruct Parisians about their own city.
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In the hot seat:
Even before Sept. 11, professional firefighters enjoyed the glow of a heroic mystique. Stock characters in picture books and childhood stories, they’ve long captured the imagination of children and remained in our adult psyches as steadfast, brave men and women who protect our lives and property.
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Agreeing on what to argue about:
A new report on the nations environment presents a mosaic picture, containing both disturbing news such as the fact that virtually all our streams and groundwater contain contaminants and good news such as the fact that global-warming producing carbon safely stored in trees increased by 80 percent in the Eastern United States from the 1950s to the 1990s.
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Oh, no! It’s Ig Nobel time again!
On Oct. 3, men and women from four continents will take the stage at Sanders Theatre, where Nobel laureates will shake their hands 1,200 strangers will pelt them with paper airplanes and a worldwide Internet TV audience will watch them receive their Ig Nobel Prizes. Each of the 10 new Ig Nobel Prize winners has done something that first makes people laugh, then makes them think.