January 2021 Harvard Longwood Campus Beth Israel Deaconess Merck Research Medical Center Laboratory East Campus

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

January 2021 Harvard Longwood Campus Beth Israel Deaconess Merck Research Medical Center Laboratory East Campus E U N E V A S T T E S U H C T A E S E S R A T M S T O T S N E E R M T H A O A B S E R M R A C Y S A R C I I A N A S S G O S T A E T D R R D E GAR R S N D R E FIELD S A T E TR T E E A 21 R EET R S T N G ST C T B E R N R E T S T A O T E T Y E E A E R R A E G W EUS E R A TIS S T U R N R T T E T D REET T G S IN A O K L S O E N Y C O L I L S S N D E G IN N Y T MAR R R B S TIN ST E S A O R R T O TR Y E 1705 D R F E R E G E E T A 26 T X A R E O D T T L G E S E P N W S Botanic Gardens Sacramento Field e 5A O g T d CRESCENT S K e N TREET E tr T N T it E E T E E E K IV R M C R T O E T D S A E U R D N R L I R T E E & T R A R C T S U H T N A 3 5 O R m A N S E a M T L C S E F h N L N V Y o a s E A O r k A m G r W K N V IS w a l E o s P o R SACRAMENTO STREET O N D ER R ho B R U A T t IG & E y o c A M U M N lt S H H E u c V R D G c k O T A R a e IL A A F N S Maria L. l RO G R T rc A D S R i D T E E R C E N h E Baldwin School U Pforzheimer House c E th S a T i N b E EET T l STR C w E es o T ON A k V W W DS R c A Tuchman lm U V e o C A 113 H E B L ET H a L RE R A K T Y s b S S r E LL T O o o R E B o ND H R E R M t E E A M S 107 W O A H T E C N y W T A E Bingham tr a R O S n L N S D ll E A rd r E E A S S 160 C a te T 103 N T v n R A r th WENDEL D V a e r ET E L STREET E E H C Currier House W o E E N TR U G e e B N S l S T l l b D U N E c g r h n AR O T Observatory n T P a St. Peter's a l n E E T a a a ) rt ig i a H R R r t d S E V L D n C e m r E H E g H d o b o E A A i l A E a i J E A Parish t s h T R s t R n u a G l a T h R M E i u Q e S Q e T r ( i H n o t E E RADCLIFFE T T k n r B c tr a S S R U r e S a T S T N R C D n o ET S E e l c l a E T V i QUADRANGLE d D E M t r N R S R A P U e o R T l T J E E S St. Peter's h E U S I IR t E O E D S C A H U V R F T N N T M I D C 3 O A N S X A School D O Barnard t M R G R A M F O AN s io N 1637 A S M D le l S WY il E A 5 H T N S C H L O A O T N B ET C Cabot House U M HAMMO RE O T R ND STREET T R G E MEL American Academy of S D m RE LEN STREET A A a T 56 V R tr S ET E r D E Arts & Sciences D M D e R TR N 6 52 A A O S A Oxford Stree r O A E B P D Palfrey t e R 1 l G 8 l K N E N 10 1 e 2 - C H H A 20 ef O S L 1 k L 4 Ga J - rag c M G S e E d o H 1 R e T 8 r N I R 1 w o K E f E e C x T t U Lesley University- t O y B d Terr Swartz Stu y Terrace Doble Campus 0 e th s HEA 6 Hall for ion L t EY ST 1607- ter elig R s n EE e R T g C ld 161 23 e or 1 Engineering n T 27 i HARVARD f W w o E T d E EE Science h l d R i TR t or T S r f DIVINITY SCHOOL 40 R u Ox S KE EVERETT S Lab o 8 T AL TREET B 3 OEB 7 T T W N d O EE var 5 C TR Bunting Quadrangle 10 E Green House ar S S verett Street Shaw er-H ry ER Da ov ibra K 38 y ne nd l L R Ga r A a ra s PA 34 ge gic BRYANT STREET o lo e t o 36 t he ET n T E Cl S m TR inical Win a er g A lt S Y n he H S C s S 109 O C N o ke P U n i A Holm s B L A R H es i Z D C C C d R A k M E W r F assers r N K IG tein a b a S e a S I L V n E r o h n T H P B S all l a an R c h T C o S C i i n I E O C ty R R I aspersen si w o E R N r s T R e E C iv l V T . n o e E E O S U I E tuden ia N Buckingham Browne & R t Cente r g r T L D r Museum of ba R P d r g G B 30 il e i T M A h H c U A V C S GH Nichols School E Comparative a S C N T T IN U l K K E l D R T C el Zoology BRI L I U w E O N B 29 ax i M v a C ET G E E n i b S i T TR H ork n S ET w s R A E Pound D i TE R T er t WS M ST EE aus Harvard y E IE TR H BR S IG Longy School S er H l F T A N al zz R E H Museum o a L T R R C OL HARVARD E of Music F l A l E B of Natural N T Holy Trinity Armenian T E E E C JOHN A. PAULSON C RE R L ST A K I R L S A E e History 13 R Apostolic Church P R L FA Y E w SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING A E Y Church of m eu V L S i m s R E u K T s seu M E I R AND APPLIED SCIENCES u d r t N E R M a n E E Christ, y arv cie E d U D B T HARVARD abo H An C e E E O Scientist Pe f th st S N o a 11 G C ab E K E LAW SCHOOL L ar A O ce n e I Harvard-Epworth United r a R L R N R D Pie ffm o K A D H 61 A L V a L V E E Methodist Church ed e i D A T E N r S N A n r 9 EE e I U L u F N R N T S E k Ba h V S T a d D r D U T E a e I a N E N v LA R n b r K t a E T f a i R S ru L r r I H P KI g T g E C c m n S gs ito hi L U tin L a Y c H O as d N h en A 20 H M H y a Y A R G e A C T E C i y T r m l n r S A i V a A s l d r E T w ib E B W l o L I S o E n E R N ld a SE an S I n A G L N m O p R T n ip T S A v U L E X T T A 2 L E C e E V F S E R E H S T O t r N S d s S T U U ro nd R ST Y M R k a .
Recommended publications
  • Cv Bjorkegren.Pdf
    E-mail: [email protected] Web: http://dan.bjorkegren.com Address: Department of Economics Box B Daniel Björkegren Brown University Providence, RI, 02912 Academic Employment 2014- Assistant Professor of Economics, Brown University 2019-2020 Visiting Researcher, Microsoft Research New England 2017-2018 W. Glenn Campbell and Rita Ricardo-Campbell National Fellow, Stanford University Education 2014 Ph.D. Economics Harvard University Advisors: Michael Kremer, Greg Lewis, and Ariel Pakes 2011 M.A. Economics Stanford University 2009 M. Public Policy Harvard Kennedy School 2005 B.S. Physics University of Washington Research Publications The Adoption of Network Goods: Evidence from the Spread of Mobile Phones in Rwanda. Review of Economic Studies, 2019. Behavior Revealed in Mobile Phone Usage Predicts Credit Repayment. (with Darrell Grissen) World Bank Economic Review, 2020. The Potential of Digital Credit to Bank the Poor. (with Darrell Grissen) American Economic Association Papers and Proceedings, 2018. Conference/Workshop Articles (Peer Reviewed) Assessing Bias in Smartphone Mobility Estimates in Low Income Countries. Sveta Milusheva, Daniel Björkegren, and Leonardo Viotti. ACM Conference on Computing and Sustainable Societies (COMPASS), 2021. Balancing Competing Objectives with Noisy Data: Score-Based Classifiers for Welfare- Aware Machine Learning. Esther Rolf, Max Simchowitz, Sarah Dean, Lydia Liu, Daniel Björkegren, Moritz Hardt, and Joshua Blumenstock. International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML), 2020. Workshop: Balancing Competing Objectives for Welfare-Aware Machine Learning with Imperfect Data. Esther Rolf, Max Simchowitz, Sarah Dean, Lydia Liu, Daniel Björkegren, Moritz Hardt, and Joshua Blumenstock. Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS) Joint Workshop on AI for Social Good, 2019. Best Paper Award Measuring Informal Work with Digital Traces: Mobile Payphone Operators in Rwanda.
    [Show full text]
  • MURR CENTER - 3Rd Floor Lounge Harvard University 65 North Harvard Street, Allston
    MURR CENTER - 3rd Floor Lounge Harvard University 65 North Harvard Street, Allston MURR CENTER X X staIRS ELEVatOR X ACCESS X X T TREE X metered parking spots ARD S stairs ARV GATE 8 *Parking at metered spaces in the athletic facility is extremely TH H elevator access limited. Please see Parking section below for details. NOR From the West Take the Massachusetts Turnpike east to Exit 18 (Allston/Cambridge). After paying toll, bear left at fork towards Allston. Turn right at second set of lights onto North Harvard Street. Proceed approximately one mile. The Murr Center will be on your left. From the North Take I-93 south to Storrow Drive exit. Take Storrow Drive west for approximately five miles. Exit at Harvard Square/North Harvard Street. At top of exit, turn left onto North Harvard Street. You will see Blodgett Pool and then the Murr Center on your right. From the South Take I-95 north to I-93 north. Follow I-93 until Exit 20 (Massachusetts Turnpike). Take Mass. Pike west to Exit 20 (Allston/Cambridge). After paying toll, bear left at fork towards Allston. Turn right at second set of lights onto North Harvard Street. Proceed approximately one mile. The Murr Center will be on your left. Parking Limited parking is available within the athletic complex. Enter at Gate 8 on North Harvard Street and circle around behind the stadium to find metered spaces. Some parking is available on the street. You can also purchase a visitor’s parking pass to the Harvard Business School Lot which is located near by at 105 Western Avenue, Allston.
    [Show full text]
  • Seeking a Forgotten History
    HARVARD AND SLAVERY Seeking a Forgotten History by Sven Beckert, Katherine Stevens and the students of the Harvard and Slavery Research Seminar HARVARD AND SLAVERY Seeking a Forgotten History by Sven Beckert, Katherine Stevens and the students of the Harvard and Slavery Research Seminar About the Authors Sven Beckert is Laird Bell Professor of history Katherine Stevens is a graduate student in at Harvard University and author of the forth- the History of American Civilization Program coming The Empire of Cotton: A Global History. at Harvard studying the history of the spread of slavery and changes to the environment in the antebellum U.S. South. © 2011 Sven Beckert and Katherine Stevens Cover Image: “Memorial Hall” PHOTOGRAPH BY KARTHIK DONDETI, GRADUATE SCHOOL OF DESIGN, HARVARD UNIVERSITY 2 Harvard & Slavery introducTION n the fall of 2007, four Harvard undergradu- surprising: Harvard presidents who brought slaves ate students came together in a seminar room to live with them on campus, significant endow- Ito solve a local but nonetheless significant ments drawn from the exploitation of slave labor, historical mystery: to research the historical con- Harvard’s administration and most of its faculty nections between Harvard University and slavery. favoring the suppression of public debates on Inspired by Ruth Simmon’s path-breaking work slavery. A quest that began with fears of finding at Brown University, the seminar’s goal was nothing ended with a new question —how was it to gain a better understanding of the history of that the university had failed for so long to engage the institution in which we were learning and with this elephantine aspect of its history? teaching, and to bring closer to home one of the The following pages will summarize some of greatest issues of American history: slavery.
    [Show full text]
  • Harvard Divinity School Statement of Community Values
    Harvard Divinity School Harvard University Statement of Values Harvard Divinity School Statement of Community Values Harvard University aspires to provide education and scholarship Harvard Divinity School confirms and embraces the values of of the highest quality—to advance the frontiers of knowledge the University, seeking only to define them further in light of the and to prepare individuals for life, work, and leadership. unique nature of our local community, understanding the invaluable Achieving these aims depends on the efforts of thousands opportunity presented to us in our differences and shared concerns of faculty, students, and staff across the University. Some of as we educate scholars, teachers, ministers, and other professionals us make our contribution by engaging directly in teaching, in the study of religion for local or global leadership and service. learning, and research, others of us, by supporting and enabling those core activities in essential ways. Whatever our individual roles, and wherever we work within Harvard, we owe it to one another to uphold certain basic values of the community. These values include: At HDS: • Respect for the rights, differences, and dignity of others. • We seek to respect, understand, and learn from the cultures and beliefs of the members of our diverse community. Conscious of our own levels of privilege, we seek—with kindness and compassion—to engage in open and active dialogue that broadens our perspectives, increases our knowledge and awareness, and fosters mutual understanding and empowerment. • Honesty and integrity in all dealings. • We are committed, individually and as a community, to listening, speaking, and acting with candor, with equitability, and with courtesy, so that all may participate freely within a climate of openness, trust, and sensitivity.
    [Show full text]
  • Front Matter
    Ingrassia_Gridiron 11/6/15 12:22 PM Page vii © University Press of Kansas. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution prohibited without permission of the Press. Contents List of Illustrations ix Acknowledgments xi INTRODUCTION The Cultural Cornerstone of the Ivory Tower 1 CHAPTER ONE Physical Culture, Discipline, and Higher Education in 1800s America 14 CHAPTER TWO Progressive Era Universities and Football Reform 40 CHAPTER THREE Psychologists: Body, Mind, and the Creation of Discipline 71 CHAPTER FOUR Social Scientists: Making Sport Safe for a Rational Public 93 CHAPTER FIVE Coaches: In the Disciplinary Arena 115 CHAPTER SIX Stadiums: Between Campus and Culture 139 CHAPTER SEVEN Academic Backlash in the Post–World War I Era 171 EPILOGUE A Circus or a Sideshow? 200 Ingrassia_Gridiron 11/6/15 12:22 PM Page viii © University Press of Kansas. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution prohibited without permission of the Press. viii Contents Notes 207 Bibliography 269 Index 305 Ingrassia_Gridiron 11/6/15 12:22 PM Page ix © University Press of Kansas. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution prohibited without permission of the Press. Illustrations 1. Opening ceremony, Leland Stanford Junior University, October 1891 2 2. Walter Camp, captain of the Yale football team, circa 1880 35 3. Grant Field at Georgia Tech, 1920 41 4. Stagg Field at the University of Chicago 43 5. William Rainey Harper built the University of Chicago’s academic reputation and also initiated big-time athletics at the institution 55 6. Army-Navy game at the Polo Grounds in New York, 1916 68 7. G. T. W. Patrick in 1878, before earning his doctorate in philosophy under G.
    [Show full text]
  • Sounding Spaces
    friday, february 28 11:00 registration 12:00-12:15 opening remarks Michael Veal, Director of Graduate Studies 12:15-1:45 panel: sounds of protest Moderator: Zac Stewart sonic activism against the tear gas: hongkonger’s raging roars and sound acts Winnie W C Lai (Music, University of Pennsylvania) festa da penha in brazil’s post slavery abolition period: black cor- porealities and musicalities as contestation of a hegemonic space Eduardo Marcel Vidili (Music, Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janei- ro, Visiting Scholar at University of Texas at Austin) the fact of black nonrelationality: cecil taylor in paris Matthias Mushinski (Film and Moving Image Studies, Concordia University) 2:00-3:30 workshop with daphne brooks “all things must pass”: space, place & radical racial affinities in the record shop Daphne Brooks, William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of African American Studies, sounding spaces American Studies, and Women’s, Gender & Sexuality Studies 7th biennial yale graduate music symposium 4:00-5:30 panel: technologies of mediation Moderator: Holly Chung february 28-29, 2020 exploring the morphology of matter and space as an inclusive keynote speaker: kwami coleman (nyu) performance system using immersive technology Lewis Smith (Music, Drama, and Performing Arts, Ulster University) workshop: daphne brooks (yale) desire, sound and the postcolonial politics of cinematic adaptation in vishal bharadwaj’s haider Abhipsa Chakraborty (English, University at Buffalo) vodou on the air: radio, transnationalism, and music All events in 106
    [Show full text]
  • Harvard University Graduate School of Design and Harvard Art Museums Announce Collaborative Exhibition the Divine Comedy
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Shannon Stecher Graduate School of Design 617-495-4784 [email protected] HARVARD UNIVERSITY GRADUATE SCHOOL OF DESIGN AND HARVARD ART MUSEUMS ANNOUNCE COLLABORATIVE EXHIBITION The Divine Comedy consists of major installations by Olafur Eliasson, Tomás Saraceno, and Ai Weiwei that explore intersections of art, design, and the public domain CAMBRIDGE, MA (March 11, 2011)—The Harvard University Graduate School of Design and the Harvard Art Museums are pleased to announce an unprecedented three- part exhibition that addresses the converging domains of contemporary art and design practice. Entitled The Divine Comedy, this exhibition is comprised of major installations by internationally acclaimed artists Olafur Eliasson, Tomás Saraceno, and Ai Weiwei, and is on display March 21 through May 17, 2011, at the Graduate School of Design, the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, and the Northwest Science Building. “We are extremely excited to host these path-breaking artists and their explorations of how art and design can powerfully engage the public domain, an area of increasing focus at the Graduate School of Design,” said Mohsen Mostafavi, Dean, and Alexander and Victoria Wiley Professor of Design at the Graduate School of Design. The Divine Comedy borrows its title from Dante Alighieri’s epic medieval poem in which the author presents a vision of earthly existence as an allegorical journey through the realms of Hell, Purgatory, and Heaven. Dante’s masterwork is widely considered to be the first poetic presentation in which scientific and philosophical themes were given central place. This exhibition explores the political dimensions of History (Weiwei), Mind (Eliasson), and Cosmos (Saraceno), and how these aspects of contemporary experience are being engaged by art and design speculation today.
    [Show full text]
  • Harvard Library Bulletin</Em>
    The Kentucky Review Volume 8 | Number 2 Article 5 Summer 1988 Keyes Metcalf and the Founding of The Harvard Library Bulletin Dennis Carrigan University of Kentucky, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://uknowledge.uky.edu/kentucky-review Part of the Library and Information Science Commons Right click to open a feedback form in a new tab to let us know how this document benefits you. Recommended Citation Carrigan, Dennis (1988) "Keyes Metcalf and the Founding of The Harvard Library Bulletin," The Kentucky Review: Vol. 8 : No. 2 , Article 5. Available at: https://uknowledge.uky.edu/kentucky-review/vol8/iss2/5 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University of Kentucky Libraries at UKnowledge. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Kentucky Review by an authorized editor of UKnowledge. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Keyes Metcalf and the Founding of The Harvard Library Bulletin Dennis Carrigan In Random Recollections of an Anachronism, the first volume of his autobiography, Keyes Metcalf has told how he came to head the Harvard Library. In 1913 he had joined the New York Public Library, and had expected to work there until retirement. One day early in 1936, however, he was summoned to the office of his superior, Harry Miller Lydenberg, and there introduced to James Bryant Conant, the President of Harvard, who was in New York to discuss with Mr. Lydenberg a candidate to be Librarian of Harvard College, a position that was expected to lead to that of Director of the University Library.
    [Show full text]
  • Ivy+ Program Locations
    CUTLER AVE MILLER STREET PITMAN STREET CHILTON STREET AVON PL SPRING STREET HURLBUT ST LAUREL AV. KENNEDY MASSACHUSETTSAVENUE VASSAL LANE CYPRESS STREET TIERNEY HARRIS STREET BEACON STREET BEECH STREET DONNELL STREET EAST FRESH POND PARKWAY FAYERWEATHER STREET STREET GAR SACRAMENTO STREET DEN GARFIELD STREET 21 ST TRAYMORE GARDENS STREET BOWDOIN STREET OVERLAND STREET ST ARCADIA CONCORD AVE GRAY STREET EUSTIS STREET KELLEY STREET GRAY LINNAEAN STREET STANDISH STREET GRAY GARDENS MARTIN ST 20 ROBINSON STREET 1705 26 SOMERVILLE AVENUE YAWKEY WAY OXFORD ST GARDEN COURT SAVILLE STREET WEST Botanic Gardens 5A Sacramento Field BLEACHERY CT. BURLINGTON AVENUE WORTHINGTON STREET CRESCENT STREET KENT COURT VASSAL LANE Kittredge LAKEVIEW AVENUE WATERMAN RD LEXINGTON AVENUE Conway Playground HOLLY A 3 5 Kingsley Park MARTIN STREET FERNALD DRIVE Comstock SACRAMENTO PL Graham & V Parks WRIGHT STREET KENT STREET ENUE SACRAMENTO STREET B & M POPLAR RD HUTCHINSON MADISON STREET School AVON STREET HURON AVENUE RAILR FULLERTON STREET GARDEN ST Faculty Row PARK STREET GARDEN TER Maria L. OAD GURNEY STREET STREET Baldwin School Pforzheimer House ALLEN CT. DONNELL STREET STREET CARVER STREET Wolbach PROPERZI WAY VAN NESS STREET Tuchman WALKER STREET LAKE VIEW AVE Cabot 113 HUDSON Beckwith Circle FAYERWEATHER STREET Holmes R CT. BEAC HOWLAND ROYAL AVENUE MANASSAS AVENUE Moors 107 WENDELL STREET Hall TOWE HAWTHORNEBROOKLINE AVENUE PARK GRANVILLE ROAD Center for E Bingham ON STREET Landmark Center D Entry Astrophysics C 103 TYLER STREET 160 Harvard T WENDELL STREET HARRISON STREET Currier House Whitman GORHAM RESERVOIR STREET Briggs Hall MALCOLM ROAD Observatory STREET Dance Center SHEPARD STREE A Jordan North HURON AVE Gilbert Quadrangle RADCLIFFE B Daniels STREET QUADRANGLE STREET IVALOO STREET Athletic Center North Hall Harvard @ Trilogy St.
    [Show full text]
  • SARA J. SCHECHNER David P. Wheatland Curator of The
    SARA J. SCHECHNER David P. Wheatland Curator of the Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments Lecturer on the History of Science Harvard University, Department of the History of Science Science Center 251c, 1 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 (617) 496-9542 | [email protected] http://scholar.harvard.edu/saraschechner CONTENT Material Culture History of Astronomy EXPERTISE Science and Religion American Science Early Scientific Instruments Popular Culture and Science EDUCATION PhD (History of Science). Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, 1988. AM (History of Science). Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, 1982. MPhil (History and Philosophy of Science). Emmanuel College, Cambridge University, Cambridge, England, 1981. AB summa cum laude (History and Science, Physics). Harvard-Radcliffe, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, 1979. AWARDS Paul Bunge Prize for the History of Scientific Instruments, Hans R. Jenemann-Stiftung, AND HONORS Gessellschaft Deutscher Chemiker (German Chemical Society) and Deutsche Bunsen-Gesellschaft für physikalische Chemie (German Bunsen Society for Physical Chemistry), 2019. LeRoy E. Doggett Prize for Historical Astronomy, American Astronomical Society, 2018. Telescopes-Mechanical/Other (second place), Stellafane Convention, for a quilt, “This is Stellafane!” 2018. Great Exhibitions Prize, British Society for the History of Science, for Body of Knowledge: A History of Anatomy (in 3 Parts), 2014. Dean’s Impact Award, Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University, 2014. The Paul and Irene Hollister Lecturer on Glass, Bard Graduate Center, 2010. Telescopes-Mechanical/Special (first place), Stellafane Convention, for a historical quilt, “The Great 26-Inch Telescope at Foggy Bottom,” 2009. Joseph H. Hazen Education Prize, History of Science Society, 2008. First Place, International Design Awards 2007, for Time, Life, & Matter, 2007.
    [Show full text]
  • January 2020
    @harvardsocal @harvardsocal facebook.com/groups/harvardsocal WWW.HARVARDSOCAL.ORG (310) 546-5252 JANUARY 2020 Upcoming Events Harvard Club’s 2020 Rose Bowl Tailgate WED, JAN 1 @ 11:00AM Private residence overlooking Arroyo/Rose Bowl $100, adults; $60, children Recital/Film Screening: Ben Hong The Dins and Kroks Return to L.A. and Ty Kim MBA ’00 SUN, JAN 5 @ 5:30PM Join the Harvard Club of Southern California in welcom- The Colburn School, Thayer Hall ing two of Harvard’s most prestigious a cappella groups No charge, RSVP required as they return to Los Angeles. The Harvard Din & Tonics and the Harvard Krokodiloes will be performing at the Westwood Presbyterian Church at 7:30PM on Thursday, Love Boat: Taiwan Film Screening January 16. & Book Signing SAT, JAN 11 @ 1:00PM This will be the groups’ fourth annual Wintersession visit Artshare LA to the Southland. The past three concerts were completely $20, members; $30, non-members sold out, with people turned away at the door, so we en- courage you to buy your tickets now. All tickets MUST be purchased in advance. Beyond the High -- Opportunities The cost is $15 for members, $30 for non-members. If you Across the Cannabis Spectrum are not a member of the Club, this is an excellent opportu- SAT, JAN 11 @ 2:30PM nity to join us. Annual membership is just $25 for recent Cross Campus - Santa Monica graduates, and as low as $45 a year for everyone else (with $25, members; $35, non-members purchase of a three-year membership), so if you buy three tickets, it’s like getting your membership for free.
    [Show full text]
  • Brevia Work Has Advanced on Its Huge North- Public Health (HSPH), Effective Next Jan- West Corner Building (See March-April Uary
    New Dean for Public Health New Script for One L,” January-February Julio Frenk, who served as Mexico’s Min- 2007, page 59), the school has invested sub- ister of Health from 2000 to 2006, has been stantially in international programs, and appointed dean of the Harvard School of Brevia work has advanced on its huge North- Public Health (HSPH), effective next Jan- west Corner building (see March-April uary. He succeeds Barry R. Bloom, who 2008, page 54). More than 26,000 donors has been dean for contributed to the the past decade. campaign. Frenk, a specialist in health systems Arts and policy, is cur- Administrator rently a senior fel- Lori E. Gross, who low in the global- previously over- health program at saw arts initia- the Bill & Melinda tives at MIT, has Gates Foundation. moved upriver to In making the an- become Harvard’s nouncement on associate provost July 29, President for arts and cul- Drew Faust cited ture. She will Frenk’s experi- work with the ence “at the cross- Harvard Art Mu- roads of scholar- seum, American ship and practice” Repertory Thea- and his “strong commitment to reducing SCIENCE SETTING. The first Allston tre, Villa I Tatti, and the University Li- disparities in health.” The full text of science laboratories, now under construc- brary; participate in Allston planning for tion, will present a rectilinear face to the the announcement is available at surrounding streets (see rendering in arts and cultural facilities; and collabo- www.news.harvard. “Refining the Allston Master Plan,” rate with whatever new structure for the edu/gazette/2008/08.21/ January-February, page 60).
    [Show full text]