Campus & Community
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A blueprint for better conversations
After months of listening and learning, open inquiry co-chairs detail working group’s recommendations
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Celebrating 25th anniversary of Radcliffe Institute
Three Harvard presidents, two Nobel laureates gather to mark ‘unique legacy and remarkable impact’
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Scruggs describes ‘super surreal moment’ when she made Olympics history
Harvard fencer reflects on path to silver and gold — including facing a childhood idol — and what keeps her balanced, focused
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Why are you so offended?
It’s 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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A snapshot of belonging at Harvard
University launches Pulse survey
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This month in Harvard history
Jan. 24, 1873 The first issue of the weekly Magenta – predecessor of The Harvard Crimson – appears as a two-column booklet that contains reviews, essays, and poems. The…
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Police Reports
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Jan. 20. The official log is located at Police Headquarters, 29 Garden St.
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Threat no more
Harvard University Police officers escort Kenneth Leong from the Science Center following his arrest on Jan. 18. Leong is accused of bursting into an auditorium filled with more than 250 students as the students were beginning work on a final exam. Witnesses say Leong hurled a brick against a blackboard and threatened to detonate a bomb. The building was evacuated but no explosives were found and nobody was injured. Leong was arraigned on various charges in Cambridge District Court and ordered to undergo 20 days of psychiatric evaluation at an area mental health facility.
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Conjuring up a self:
Stephanie Sandler wears a deep blue stone on one hand and a wide gold wedding band on the other. These are idiosyncratic pieces – large for her fingers, a little irregular in shape, strong statements for such a slight and self-contained woman. She has something of the ballerinas mien about her – erect, watchful – and indeed, she danced for 11 years, from the time she was 4 until she started reading Russian novels as a teenager. Then she stopped dancing but her mind has continued to sketch precise and unpredictable movements, always graceful in their arcs, a little dangerous in their turns, absorbing to behold.
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Five seniors receive Rockefeller Memorial Fellowships
The Michael C. Rockefeller Memorial Fellowships Administrative Board has announced the selection of five graduating seniors for its 2001-02 fellowship.
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The Big Picture:
In sports, as in much of life, it is the small, imperceptible things that happen in the background, behind the scenes, that separate the good from the very good and make the best that much better.
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Kennedy School launches new Kuwait program
Thanks to a generous contribution from the Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Sciences (KFAS), the Kennedy School of Government has launched a new program to expand teaching and research on the critical issues facing Kuwait and the Gulf region, Dean Joseph S. Nye Jr. announced.
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Competing for affordable housing for others:
It requires only a cursory glance at the classified ads to determine just how exorbitant the cost of living has become in and around Boston.
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Ford to add another million to $1.5 million gift
The Ford Motor Co., through the Ford Motor Company Fund, plans to add $1 million to an existing five-year award of $1.5 million to Harvard. The new funds will support a University Committee on Environment study of the long-term environmental and economic consequences of transportation choices in developing countries, taking a multidisciplinary systems perspective. The Harvard team will collaborate with a local university on a new country case, India, expanding a study initiated in China that is led by Gordon McKay Professor of Environmental Engineering Peter P. Rogers Ph.D. 66 and seed-funded by the Thornton Foundation.
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NewsMakers
Energy Secretary to teach at Kennedy School U.S. Secretary of Energy Bill Richardson will teach a course at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG) this semester, announced Dean Joseph S.…
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She’s in a class by herself:
As a successful midcareer professional, Janine Clifford last year confronted an intriguing dilemma – whether to return to her Honolulu architectural firm or continue her ascent toward a doctorate degree at the Graduate School of Design (GSD). After careful consideration she chose to do both.
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White House honors efforts of Law School’s William Alford
Last month, William P. Alford, the Henry L. Stimson Professor of Law and director of East Asian Legal Studies at Harvard Law School, was the guest of President and Mrs. Clinton at a White House dinner honoring the Special Olympics. Alford was invited in recognition of his work on behalf of the Special Olympics in China.
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Gipson receives Research to Prevent Blindness award
Ilene K. Gipson, senior scientist and ocular surface scholar at The Schepens Eye Research Institute, and professor of ophthalmology at Harvard Medical School, has received a $65,000 Senior Scientific Investigator Award from Research to Prevent Blindness (RPB).
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Kaplan to give KSG inside scoop
The world was watching as Pope John Paul II embarked on his historic journey to Cuba three years ago – the first visit by the Catholic Churchs spiritual leader since Fidel Castro and his band of revolutionaries toppled the Batista regime in the island-nation in 1959. Reporters from around the globe assembled in Havana to document the popes arrival, his message to the Cuban people, and their reaction to his words.
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A new perspective toward Boston
Dedication ceremonies for the new 121,000 square foot Spangler Center were held at the Harvard Business School (HBS) on Monday, Jan. 22.
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Art Museums appoint renowned conservator
James Cuno, the Elizabeth and John Moors Cabot Director of the Harvard University Art Museums, and Maxwell L. Anderson, director of the Whitney Museum of American Art, announced their joint appointment of Carol Mancusi-Ungaro as director of the Center for the Technical Study of Modern Art at Harvard University and director of Conservation of the Whitney Museum. The appointments become effective April 1. The Whitney appointment is accompanied by a $5 million grant from the Robert W. Wilson Foundation in support of conservation at the Whitney, given by Whitney trustee Robert Wilson.
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Getting an early start at Harvard
Students from Edwards Middle School in Charlestown paid the Graduate School of Education a visit last Friday, Jan. 19, for a day of questions and answers, tours, and insight into college life. Sponsored by Project IF (Inventing the Future), a research and practice partnership centered at GSE, the annual visit is part of the initiatives mission of educational mentoring, future-oriented counseling, and optimum development for children of low-income backgrounds.
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College’s Phi Beta Kappa elects the Senior 48
The following students were selected as the Senior 48 of the Phi Beta Kappa chapter at Harvard College. The students were elected to Alpha Iota in the fall of 2000.
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Two University scientists receive Runyon-Winchell Fellowship awards
The Cancer Research Fund of the Damon Runyon-Walter Winchell Foundation in New York awarded 18 Runyon-Winchell postdoctoral fellowships to outstanding young scientists conducting theoretical and experimental research relevant to the study of the causes, mechanisms, therapies, and prevention of cancer. Among the 18 recipients, who were selected at the November 2000 Scientific Advisory Committee review, are two young scientists who will conduct their research at the University – Kathryn M. Koeller, and Mohammad Movassaghi. The three-year fellowships are carried out in the laboratories of the fellows sponsors.
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Faculty of Medicine – Memorial Minute:
At a meeting of the Faculty of Medicine on December 20, 2000, the following Minute was placed upon the records. Manfred Leslie Karnovsky, Harold T. White Professor of Biological Chemistry,…
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Teaching medicine Western-style
When School of Public Health (SPH) doctoral student Mark Hickman goes to medical school in September, he will not be commuting. He is flying off to the green farming terraces of the village of Dhulakiel in Nepal where, on a swath of land jutting from the side of a Himalayan mountain, engineers are laboring in the thin air to erect a building that may revolutionize medical education in Nepal. The building will be a medical school organized by Nepalese officials with the help of Harvard professors.
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Civil War soldiers fought with pen as well as sword
One of the questions Civil War historians have argued over is the extent to which ordinary enlisted men cared about the issues behind the conflict.
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Faculty of Arts and Sciences – Memorial Minute
At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on October 17, 2000, the following Minute was placed upon the records.
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Faculty of Arts and Sciences – Memorial Minute:
At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on November 14, 2000, the following Minute was placed upon the records.
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A picture’s worth 1,000 prejudices
It is a standard albumen print, labeled Palmyre, Sculpture dun chapiteau, Syrie, and signed in the lower right by the Bonfils studio. The caption refers to the capital of a fallen column that dominates the foreground, and locates it at a tourist site in Palmyra, Syria. Except for a child apparently sleeping on the capital, dwarfed by its deeply carved acanthus leaves, the scene is barren.
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Snow ball
Leverett House residents take to the snow for a game of football that scores all the way around
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Faculty Council Notes
At its eighth meeting of the year the Council heard a report from Paul Bergen, the Facultys Instructional Computing Group Manager, on the development of instructional computing in the Faculty. Dean Paul Martin, chair of the Standing Committee on Information Technology, and Frank Steen, director of Computer Services, were present for this discussion.
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Harvard History
January 1659 – President Charles Chauncy describes a recent “great disorder at Cambridge” involving nighttime fighting “betweene the schollars and some of the toune.” Cambridge and Harvard thus chalk up…
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Police Log
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Saturday, Jan. 13. The official log is located at Police Headquarters, 29 Garden St.
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Suspect is sought
On Monday, Jan. 8, at approximately 2:19 p.m., the victim of an indecent assault and battery incident came to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) headquarters to report that she had just been attacked while walking along Berkeley Street near Phillips Street in Cambridge. The suspect approached the victim from behind and grabbed her in an indecent manner. The victim was knocked to the ground, whereupon her screams prompted a witness to approach. The suspect then fled down Berkeley Street toward Garden Street. An immediate search of the area by the HUPD and the Cambridge Police Department proved unsuccessful.