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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Newsmakers
Four faculty receive awards from academy in Berlin
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Billie Jean King to receive Radcliffe Medal
Billie Jean King, a leader for social change both on and off the tennis court, will be presented with the 2002 Radcliffe Medal during ceremonies on Friday (June 7) at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study.
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In brief
Four faculty receive awards from academy in Berlin
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Franken’s counsel: ‘It’s lonely at the bottom’
Al Franken is the perfect Class Day speaker – just ask him.
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GSAS Medalists announced
A physicist who has helped guide U.S. science policy, a biologist who is Indias foremost conservationist, a psychologist who studies organizational behavior, and an engineer who has made major contributions to the science of aerodynamics received the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Centennial Medal on Wednesday (June 6) at the Harvard Faculty Club.
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Commencement bells have appeal
A joyous peal of bells will ring throughout Cambridge today (June 6).
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Ngwenyama plays the ‘music of the spheres’
Now that Nokuthula Ngwenyama is about to receive her masters in theological studies, she feels less sure about her goals than when she started the program.
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He wants to be America’s dentist
When Phillip Woods was in the eighth grade, he announced to his parents, Im going to Harvard. It was a big goal for the son of a Baptist preacher in rural North Carolina.
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KSG graduates help Kenyans battle AIDS
Shanti Nayak and Nazanin Samari-Kermani have made the Kenyan battle against AIDS a personal matter, traveling this semester from Mount Elgon in Kenyas west to the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa in the east to help a leading anti-poverty organization gear up to fight the disease.
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Ben Crockett is off to the show
Major League Baseballs scouting report for Harvard pitcher Ben Crockett 02 applauds his loose, live, strong arm, comparing his lean frame to legend Orel Hershiser. The report celebrates his downer curve with late bite and his solid fielding skills. It concludes with something of a curveball, at least in the world of bottom-line professional sports, describing Crockett, the Crimsons 6-foot-3-inch slinger, as an Outstanding person. Seems the senior economics major has made an impression with more than just his 92 mph fastball.
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The divine secrets of the Jimenez sisterhood
No one needs to tell the Jimenez family that Harvard is worlds away from their home in Rancho Cascade, Calif.
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351st Commencement
351st Commencement: Harvard confers 6,409 degrees and 361 certificates
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Celebrating a bridge built to last
From August through May, the workers in the program get four hours of paid release time each week to learn English, computer skills, or the subjects they need to earn a high school diploma. Held onsite, the classes are staggered to cover work schedules ranging from 9-to-5 to the graveyard shift.
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Davis Center names awardees for 2002-03
The Davis Center for Russian Studies has announced the recipients of its fellowship, dissertation, and research travel awards for 2002-03.
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Music fellowships, awards announced
The Department of Music has announced that $120,000 went toward fellowship and award programs for the departments graduate and undergraduate students.
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Center for Jewish Studies announces prize winners
The Harvard University Center for Jewish Studies has announced that two graduating seniors are the recipients of the 2002 Norman Podhoretz Prize in Jewish Studies and the Selma and Lewis Weinstein Prize in Jewish Studies.
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GSD students win Joint Center awards
Harvards Joint Center for Housing Studies has announced its selection of Rachel D. Jaffe and Abigail N. Hoover, both of the Graduate School of Design, as this years recipients of the Awards for Outstanding Housing Paper or Design. Each year, the center awards the prizes for graduate-level research and design that best advances the field of housing studies as an academic endeavor.
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CES announces student awards and internships for 2002-03
The Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies (CES) has announced its student awards and internships for the 2002-03 academic year. The center will support the projects and research of 35 undergraduate and graduate students with grants that total more than $350,000.
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Five Radcliffe fellows featured in new video on Web
Question: What do the growth of suburbia, contemporary landscape painting, the evolution of sea urchins, marriage laws in colonial India, and the women writers of imperial China have in common?
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CSWR gives summer grants
The Center for the Study of World Religions (CSWR) at the Divinity School has announced the recipients of its 2002 Summer Research Grant Awards in the field of religion, health, and healing. The funded research promises to contribute significantly to the community of scholarship on the intersection of religion and healing. Students will present their research at a CSWR discussion series during the 2002-03 academic year. Visit the Religion, Health, and Healing Initiative Web site at http://www.hds.harvard.edu/cswr/health/health.htm for regularly updated information about the research projects and the discussion series.
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Extension School announces prizewinners
This year, the Extension Schools Commencement Speaker award will go to Linda Hime Newberry, A.L.M. 02, whose speech is titled An Extension Degree as a Patchwork Quilt. Francis J. Aguilar, professor of Business Administration Emeritus, will deliver the main address, titled Cleared for Take-Off, at the graduate certificate ceremonies.
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‘The age of Ozzy Osbourne’
As he edged into the main theme of his Phi Beta Kappa oration, The Fate of Eloquence in the Age of Ozzy Osbourne, historian Simon Schama divulged some interesting biographical clues to the sources of his own eloquent speaking and writing.
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Erratum
Because of incorrect information supplied to the Gazette, a page 8 article in the May 30 issue, Biotech Club Announces Winners, reported an incorrect title for David Edwards. His correct title is Gordon McKay Professor of the Practice of Biomedical Engineering.
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This month in Harvard history
June 19, 1725 – The Harvard Corporation elects Benjamin Wadsworth, Class of 1690, as Harvards eighth President.
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Seniors take oath at ROTC ceremony
In a speech at the Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) Commissioning Ceremony Wednesday (June 5), President Lawrence H. Summers made it clear that the University can accommodate both intellectual freedom and patriotism.
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Seniors elected to Phi Beta Kappa
The following are the graduating seniors elected to Phi Beta Kappa:
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University Choir to release seventh CD
Next month, the Harvard University Choir will release its seventh CD, Choral Music of Amy Beach and Randall Thompson. Recorded in Londons 12th century Temple Church while the choir was on its European tour last summer, the CD includes noted American composer Amy Beachs three-movement a cappella motet, Help us, O God, and Alleluia by former chairman of Harvards music department Randall Thompson 20.
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Two seniors awarded Radcliffe’s Fay Prize
Susie Yi Huang, a chemistry concentrator who will graduate with bachelors and masters degrees, and Andrew Leren Lynn, a history and literature concentrator who will graduate with a bachelor of arts degree, are the winners of the 2002 Captain Jonathan Fay Prize, which is awarded by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University. Drew Gilpin Faust, the dean of the institute, announced the names at the Radcliffe Associations Strawberry Tea on Wednesday (May 29).
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‘Gravitating’ toward international public health
Four years as a Harvard College undergraduate have taken graduating senior Duncan Smith-Rohrberg from believing in mind over matter to pondering matters of the mind.
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‘Democracy works, and you can get stuff done’
Elizabeth Drye has a simple philosophy – do what youre interested in and follow the opportunities. Shes interested in so many things that this has led to a complex life – Stanford University, Harvard School of Public Health, Congress, the White House, Harvard Medical School, and motherhood.