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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Weatherhead Center awards 60 grants and fellowships
The Weatherhead Center for International Affairs has announced that it is awarding 60 student grants and fellowships amounting to more than $100,000 for the 2002-03 academic year. Sixteen grants will support Harvard College undergraduates, 32 grants will support graduate students, and 12 awards are being made to undergraduate and graduate student groups for their own projects. In recent years, the Weatherhead Center has increased support for Harvard students significantly, increasing both financial resources available and the number of student awards, and establishing new programs and seminars for students.
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Local teens STEP into work world
Thanks to tight budgets and layoffs throughout the region, the livin might not be so easy this summertime for teenagers scrambling for jobs in Boston and Cambridge. But Harvard is doing what it can to help, developing summer jobs for teens in its host communities around the University. Teenagers will fill close to 100 summer jobs at Harvard – from landscaping to data entry, faculty assistance to maintenance and moving – through the Harvard Summer Teen Employment Program, or STEP.
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FAS Memorial minute
At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on May 7, 2002, the following Minute was placed upon the records.
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A wrinkle in time
Sushi for breakfast? Why not? Why not pizza? Why not chocolate cake?
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This month in Harvard history
May 4, 1943 – At the Boston Chapter of the American Institute of Architects, the Boston firm of Perry, Shaw & Hepburn accepts the J. Harleston Parker Gold Medal for Houghton Library as the best architecture in New England for 1942. The City of Boston has given the award annually since 1923.
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Memorial service is set for John Shlien
A memorial service will be held for John Shlien, professor of education and counseling psychology emeritus, at the Memorial Church on May 29 at 3 p.m. The service will be followed by a reception in the Eliot-Lyman Room of Longfellow Hall. Shlien died March 23 at his vacation home in Big Sur, Calif. He was 83.
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Faculty agrees to switch to 4-pt. scale
At the May 21 Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) Faculty Meeting, the Faculty unanimously approved two changes in Harvard College policies concerning grading and honors.
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Political theorist – and practitioner
For Nancy Rosenblum, liberalism is more than just a political philosophy to be studied and taught, its an ideal to be put into practice.
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KSG puts on its work gloves
About 30 John F. Kennedy School of Government (KSG) staff traded in computers for trowels, and pens for work gloves last Friday (May 17) to help beautify Cambridge City Hall and other sites as part of what organizers intend to make an annual day of service to the community.
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Life at the Gazette
Editors note: As part of a Graham and Parks School annual project, two seventh-grade students joined the Harvard News Office staff for one week. This is what Jared Hughes and Helen Cowdrey had to say about their experience.
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Young reporters make headlines, eat lunch
Editors note: As part of a Graham and Parks School annual project, two seventh-grade students joined the Harvard News Office staff for one week. This is what Jared Hughes and Helen Cowdrey had to say about their experience.
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‘All right, you pencil pushers, drop and give me 50!’
Getting in shape has become a high-tech endeavor, as any fitness club habitué knows. Athletes strap on digital wristwatches and heart-rate monitors to chart the nuances of their workouts. Even once-humble treadmills now blink with confounding displays of electronics measuring anything from calories burned to miles trod to fluctuations in the stock market.
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Paleontologist, author Gould dies at 60
Stephen Jay Gould, Harvard’s outspoken and often controversial paleontologist whose groundbreaking work on evolutionary theory – coupled with his award-winning writings – brought an expanded world of science to thousands of readers, has died after a twenty-year battle with cancer. He was 60.
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‘What’s in a name?’
Sitting in a Harvard Square café in front of a half-eaten bagel and a Mountain Dew, Charity Bell could be any young mother, cradling a 3-month-old in one hand and a baby bottle in the other.
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Reinventing Radcliffe
If the newest crop of Radcliffe Institute Fellows is any indication, the purpose of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study is, perhaps, rocket science.
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Winners of Aloian Scholarships
Juniors Angela Freeburg (right) of Cabot House and Justin Erlich of Quincy House have been chosen by the Harvard Alumni Association to receive the 2002 David Aloian Memorial Scholarships. The award recognizes special contributions to the quality of life in the Houses and thoughtful leadership that makes the College an exciting place in which to live and study. Each House community nominates one House resident for the award. This years scholars and their House Masters will be honored at the fall dinner of the HAA Board of Directors.
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Errata
Two faculty members were misidentified in the May 9 issue (Four honored as College Professors). The caption should have listed William Mills Todd III (left) and Jeremy Bloxham as Harvard College Professors.
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Faculty council notice for May 15
At its 15th meeting of the year, the Faculty Council reviewed the agenda for the May 21 faculty meeting, including the motion proposing merger of the departments of East Asian Languages and Civilizations and Sanskrit and Indian Studies, and the motions concerning the calculation of grades and honors for students in Harvard College.
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This month in Harvard history
May 1908 – Funding prospects for the newly created (March 30, 1908) Graduate School of Business Administration look so grim that it may not open in September as planned. On May 19, however, an anonymous benefactor (later revealed to have been Maj. Henry Lee Higginson) comes to the rescue, underwriting the shortfall in full. In response, the Corporation chooses Economics Professor Edwin Francis Gay as the Schools first Dean. The School eventually opens on Oct. 1 with 59 students seeking the new Master of Business Administration degree.
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Police reports
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Saturday (May 11). The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
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Galbraith: A life of service
The slides that flashed across the screen as the audience crowded into the ARCO Forum easily proved the assertion that Richard Parker made minutes later in his introductory remarks: Here was a man who was not merely a celebrity, but rather embodied that rarer quality, fame.
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Newsmakers
APS elects 6 to membership
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College admissions yield near 80%
The yield on students admitted to the College has reached a level not seen since the early 1970s. Close to 80 percent of the students admitted to the Class of 2006 have chosen to enroll this coming September. The high yield means that it is unlikely that anyone will be admitted from the waiting list this year.
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In brief
Directory artists needed
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The Big Picture
For most of us, time slips by in increments of days, hours, and minutes, measured by the tick of a second hand or the yawn at a meeting. But for Norman Ramsey, the Higgins Professor of Physics Emeritus and one of the developers of the atomic clock, time is measured in the tiny movements of atoms and a second is defined as the time it takes a cesium atom to make 9,192,631,770 oscillations.
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Two-game sweep caps ‘stealth’ campaign
Call them what you will – winners, fighters, survivors – the 2002 Ivy League champion baseball team, who just won all the marbles with a two-game sweep of Princeton this past Saturday (May 11) at ODonnell Field, is a sneaky bunch. Since the second half of the season, the Crimson, who entered the Ivy arena in early April nine games under .500, have conducted a below-the-radar drive toward the Ivy title, picking their battles, and picking up wins.
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‘Lonely Crowd’ author dies at 92
Sociologist David Riesman, best known for his influential study of post-World War II American society, The Lonely Crowd, died May 10 in Binghamton, N.Y., of natural causes. He was 92.
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Chow, Muirhead win Abramson
Two FAS junior faculty members have received the Roslyn Abramson Award, given each year to recognize excellence in teaching.
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Summers visits People’s Republic of China
Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers visited the Peoples Republic of China from May 10 through May 14. Summers was accompanied on the trip by 13 Harvard faculty members who met with many Chinese scholars, including those with ties to various Harvard-related programs currently under way in China. Summers and the faculty members also met with Chinese government and education officials and Harvard alumni who gathered from across Asia.
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Initiative announces 2002-03 fellows
The Program on Justice, Welfare, and Economics at Harvard University has announced its graduate student fellowship recipients for 2002-03. This new, interdisciplinary initiative connects faculty and student research across the University, and promotes research, learning, and knowledge connecting the study of freedom, justice, and economics to human welfare and development. Dissertation fellowships and research grants will support Harvard graduate students whose research topics are relevant to questions of justice and human welfare. The main thrust of this initiative is to develop a new generation of students, linked to distinguished scholars, whose work encompasses ethical, political, and economic dimensions of human development. The members of the faculty committee involved in the initiative are professors Martha Minow and Thomas Scanlon (co-chairs), K. Anthony Appiah, Jorge I. Dominguez, Benjamin Friedman, Michael Kremer, Jane Mansbridge, Frank Michelman, Dennis Thompson, and Richard Tuck. The program is housed at the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs.