Campus & Community
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Whatâs next after a Nobel? Itâs a surprise.
Harvard scientist Gary Ruvkun awarded medicine prize for microRNA insights. âMy ignorance is bliss,â he says.
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A blueprint for better conversations
After months of listening and learning, open inquiry co-chairs detail working groupâs recommendations
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Celebrating 25th anniversary of Radcliffe Institute
Three Harvard presidents, two Nobel laureates gather to mark âunique legacy and remarkable impactâ
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Scruggs describes âsuper surreal momentâ when she made Olympics history
Harvard fencer reflects on path to silver and gold â including facing a childhood idol â and what keeps her balanced, focused
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Why are you so offended?
Itâs about status, not hurt feelings, philosopher argues
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Goodheart to step down as University secretary in May
Will continue to advise Garber and other campus leaders
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Harvard Graduate School of Education awards six Conant Fellowships
The Harvard Graduate School of Education presented six outstanding educators from the Boston and Cambridge public school systems with James Bryant Conant Fellowships on May 31. Each of the recipients will receive one year of study at the Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE).
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Scholar, critic, poet, prize winnner Vasiliauskas is off to the other Cambridge
Emily Vasiliauskas may be the only undergraduate at Harvard who has learned German specifically so she could read the poetry of Paul Celan.
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Forward is the only direction ice maestro Du knows
With his hockey skates strapped on and big pads in place, Kevin Du â07 looks like any speedy Crimson player, flashing a stick and making the puck dance.
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Ball-carrier Dawson rushes the future
While nearly every college senior can relate to the anxiety of an uncertain future, very few have the luxury (or is that curse?) of seeing how those hopes and dreams unfold on television. Harvard football running back Clifton Dawson, glued to ESPN for a solid weekend this past April during the NFL Draft, is among the select few.
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Chu on Harvard: âI wish I could stay here forever.â
Harvard womenâs hockey forward Julie Chu retired from figure skating pretty much before sheâd begun. At the tender age of 8, when she was still finding her balance on the ice, Chu opted instead for the rigors of the puck and stick. It proved to be a sage decision. Since swapping out the patterned twirls and regimented routines of figure skating for hockeyâs speed and inventiveness, Chu has pretty much gone where she pleases.
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Jarred Brown: Engineer, cheerleader, goatskinner
Harvard sports will lose a big fan when Jarred Brown graduates today. And the goat roasters at Dunster House will have to find another goat skinner.
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For Kinsella, patience truly is a virtue
Sarah Kinsella is in many ways the kind of young Renaissance woman that a university admissions committee jumps at â an aspiring doctor who will be heading to medical school at Georgetown in the fall, but also a musician and someone deeply involved with both church and family.
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Working for herself so she can work for the community
How do you celebrate getting into Harvard with your family, if your family has no real concept of Harvard?
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Shapeshifter Bratt moves between Wall Street and NGOs
âI really donât have a plan for my life,â says Martin Bratt, who is receiving his masterâs in public administration from the Kennedy School of Government (KSG), âbut feel that by being who I am I can help break down some stereotypes.â Bratt has seen both sides of the chasm that splits public service and the private sector, and believes his experience will help him build a necessary bridge between the two.
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Kennedy Schoolâs Greer aims for real change in city schools
When a friend asked Jacqueline Greer to become a volunteer mentor for city middle school kids, she agreed only reluctantly. After working with the kids a short time, however, their education became her passion.
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Sandra Ullman: Dialogue between the head and the heart
Sandra Ullman was pining for her younger brother and sister as she ambled around an extracurricular activities fair at the beginning of her freshman year at Harvard four years ago.
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âExtraordinary stridesâ made in Allston planning
The University made extraordinary strides this year in planning for physical and academic growth in Allston. In addition to filing an Allston Institutional Master Plan with the city of Boston, outlining its 50-year vision for Harvard in Allston, the University also made significant advancements in the design and public approval processes for the first buildings planned for Allston, a world-class science complex as well as an art center that would feature public galleries and serve as a permanent additional location for the Harvard University Art Museums (HUAM).
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Egglestonâs formula: Hard science and the joy of art
As a toddler, Sarah Skye Eggleston â07 of Quincy House wore a Harvard jumpsuit â the stuff of parental dreams. It worked.
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Viviany Taqueti: Writer, doctor, public servant
As a young girl, Viviany Taqueti followed her doctor father as he made rounds in the two hospitals he built in the jungles of Brazil. Sitting on the banks of the muddy, mighty Amazon River, Taqueti decided that she wanted to be like him, a person who improves the lives of others and who believes that you can do anything you set your mind to.
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âHarvard does something to you: It opens the door to the worldâ
When Raul Ruiz was a teenager, some of his teachers realized he had potential. But most, he says, recommended he apply to a vocational school; it would be a big step toward the American dream for a first-generation Mexican-American boy whose migrant-worker parents had never finished high school.
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âDigital immigrantsâ teaching âdigital nativesâ
Students coming into universities today are âdigital nativesâ and fundamentally different in their use of technology than the âdigital immigrantsâ who teach them, according to John Palfrey, executive director of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society.
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University and HUCTW reach agreement on new contract
The University and the Harvard Union of Clerical and Technical workers (HUCTW) are have announced that they have reached agreement on the terms of a new three-year contract that includes wage and benefit changes; an emphasis on career development, education, and training for staff; and a renewed commitment to the labor-management partnership. The new contract, which must be ratified by the unionâs members before it becomes official, will go into effect on July 1, 2007.
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Reunion classes give back
Reunion classes have contributed critical unrestricted funds for Harvard College and funded three professorships, two junior professorships, and some 15 scholarships. To date, four campaigns have exceeded $20 million, with a little less than a month remaining in the fundraising year.
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Presidentâs Report
To the Members of the Board of Overseers, Ladies and Gentlemen, I have the honor to present my annual report for 2006-07.
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The year in review
As Commencement crowns another year of Harvard history, here is a brief backward glance at some of the yearâs highlights.
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356th Commencement
Harvard confers 6,871 degrees and 138 certificates
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Personal glimpses into Harvard history
Since its founding in 1636, Harvard has moved through many great historical dramas. History as a listing of events â as chronicle â 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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Rhetors are revved up and ready to roll
Before long, Charles Joseph McNamara â07 will be with Teach For America in a rural Mississippi high school.
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Eleven elevated to officer
The ROTC commissioning ceremony began in a quietly festive mood in the roped-off area around the statue of John Harvard that sits before University Hall. There, 11 young men and women of the graduating class of 2007 took their oaths privately for the service of their choice â Army, Navy, Air Force, or Marines â before moving on to a stage in the Yardâs Tercentenary Theatre for the public ceremony. Before and after the cadets took center stage, the vicinity buzzed with an almost partylike atmosphere.
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Clinton lends class to Class Day
In his Class Day speech on Wednesday (June 6) Bill Clinton remarked that the great lesson he learned from the human genome project, which was brought to completion during his presidency, is that genetically all humans are 99.9 percent identical.
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Be careful what you work for
Harvard interim President Derek Bok bid the Harvard College Class of 2007 farewell Tuesday (June 5), urging graduating seniors to consider the true roots of happiness in life, and cautioning that while society values wealth, for most people money does not equal satisfaction.
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Poetry, argument, ritual mark PBK ceremony
Just after 10 Tuesday morning (June 5), crowds of Harvard seniors in black cap and gown gathered outside Harvard Hall. Family and gowned faculty mixed in, and cameras were soon clicking portraits against backdrops of tree and lawn and brick. The rain held off.
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An exaltation of bells will ring out to celebrate Commencement Day
A joyous peal of bells will ring throughout Cambridge today (June 7). In celebration of the City of Cambridge and of the countryâs oldest university â and of our earlier history when bells of varying tones summoned us from sleep to prayer, work, or study â this ancient yet new sound will fill Harvard Square and the surrounding area with music when a number of neighboring churches and institutions ring their bells at the conclusion of Harvardâs 356th Commencement Exercises.
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Four honored with the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences medal
A pioneer in computer science, an anthropologist who has revised our view of primate behavior, a Renaissance scholar who served as Harvardâs 26th president, and an economist who has helped ailing nations recover economic health received the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Centennial Medal on Wednesday (June 6) at the Harvard Faculty Club.The medalists are Frederick P. Brooks Jr. Ph.D. â56, mathematics; Sarah Blaffer Hrdy A.B. â68, Ph.D. â75, anthropology; Neil L. Rudenstine Ph.D. â64, English and American literature and language, L.L.D. â02; and Jeffrey D. Sachs Ph.D. â80, economics.
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Toni Morrison named Radcliffe Medalist
The Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study announced that author and Nobel laureate Toni Morrison will be awarded the 2007 Radcliffe Institute Medal at the annual Radcliffe Day luncheon on Friday (June 8) at 12:45 p.m. Drew G. Faust, president-elect of Harvard University and dean of the Radcliffe Institute, will provide opening remarks and present the medal. Morrison will give the keynote address.