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...Harvard was in complete control. Curtis led the charge, scoring the Crimson’s first three goals, on her way to five on the afternoon. The first goal of the day highlighted the momentum with which Harvard started the contest. Following a defensive stop, Curtis scooped up a ground ball and ran coast-to-coast. With no one close enough to contest the shot, she continued head-on towards Haldeman and flicked the ball into the net. Following an equalizer by UConn, the Crimson went on a 4-0 run to extend its lead to 5-1. A goal...

Author: By Vincent R. Oletu, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Crimson Narrowly Suffers First Home Loss | 3/16/2006 | See Source »

...It’s the kind of discourse you don’t get in any other medium,” he added. An audience member, who works as a librarian, disagreed saying that for controversial topics, Wikipedia creates a “battling for middle ground that represents nothing.” Weinberger also remarked that this process of discussion affects what types of people are successful on Wikipedia. “If you are a great expert and you are incapable of that sort of negotiation, you’re not going to make it in Wikipedia...

Author: By Stephanie S. Garlow, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Fellow: Is Wikipedia Legit? | 3/16/2006 | See Source »

...morning, and Katharine T. Waterman ’09 is doing the high knee crawl across the floor of the gym, a fake M-16 cradled in her arms. It’s a drill she does over and over. Wait for the signal, race forward, drop to the ground. She drags herself ahead with her elbows, knees scraping against the floor. The hard rubber M-16 is heavier than it looks. Waterman woke up two hours ago to catch the 6:20 a.m. shuttle to MIT. She didn’t eat breakfast, just put on her camouflage uniform...

Author: By Lois E. Beckett, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: All That She Can Be | 3/15/2006 | See Source »

...Gamut may not be as well-known as The Advocate. But what it lacks in “RoboRodeo” parties and chain-smoking intellectuals, it’s making up for with innovation. Its next issue, slated to come out this April, will break new ground among literary magazines at Harvard by publishing a “chapbook,” devoting several pages of content to the poetry of one lucky student writer. As the first Harvard publication to feature only poetry, the Gamut, started in 1998, has a pioneering tradition. Its “chapbook?...

Author: By Rachel Banks, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Running the Gamut | 3/15/2006 | See Source »

Sandro Galea is not your typical epidemiologist. Instead of studying microbes, he studies minds--human minds and how they might respond to an outbreak of SARS or Ebola or avian flu. "Once a virus hits the ground, there isn't time to contemplate how the public might react," says Galea. "We need to better understand why people react the way they do and how we can positively influence their behavior." The public psychology of emerging diseases is a new field of research, and Galea, 34, is one of its pioneers. A professor of epidemiology at the University of Michigan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Epidemiology: Forging the Future: The Disease Detectives | 3/14/2006 | See Source »

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