Word: cabot
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...that is too broad, others offer praise for its integration of different topics and real-life applications. THE EVOLUTION OF A COURSEHoping to create a course that taught both scientific theory and its applications, the Life Sciences Education Committee (LSEC) began planning Life Sciences 1a in January 2005.Led by Cabot Professor of the Natural Sciences Douglas A. Melton and composed of faculty from various life science departments, the LSEC met through the fall to create what course preceptors Ernie Chang and Elizabeth J. Heller say is the first course of its kind.“[W]e hope that students...
...Cabot House applied mathematics and economics concentrator Proud Dzambukira ‘07, a Zimbabwe native, was in Cambridge when he received a text message from Bakshi on the first night of his detention...
...complete works, died on Dec. 23 at his home in Cambridge. He was 93. The editor of The Riverside Shakespeare, for many years the definitive edition of Shakespeare’s poetry and plays, Evans received his Ph.D. from Harvard and taught English here for 15 years. Evans, the Cabot professor of English literature emeritus, was known for his courtly manners and generosity. Since his retirement in 1982, Evans has both remained a member of the Leverett House Senior Common Room and worked in his office in Widener Library almost daily, according to James Engell, chair of the Department...
Thankfully, the only thing different about this January is that students will be camping out in Lamont instead of Cabot. With the 24-hour overhaul of Lamont Library, students have enjoyed nearly a semester of opportunities to pull all-nighters. But, as the myriad students sure to be doing just that over the next week or so will prove, they haven’t really been taking full advantage. In the midst of all this academic agony, we’re grateful that one thing hasn’t yet changed: our calendar. While the Harvard College Curricular Review...
...minute online questionnaire, HUDS offered a “super duper ice cream brain break” to the House with the greatest survey participation. “If there’s sugar involved, people do it,” said HUDS spokeswoman Jami M. Snyder. Cabot House, with 89 percent participation, bagged the prize for the second straight semester. Last year’s runner-up, Leverett, placed second again with 57 percent, tying Quincy House. Cabot’s victory this fall came in the wake of a scandal-tainted win last spring, when a group...