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...published seven issues under its first owner, The Atlantic Monthly, before being sold to Manhattan Media in May 2008. The founders’ involvement with 02138 ended shortly after the magazine changed owners. Manhattan Media significantly altered the magazine’s focus, according to David J. Blum, the new editor in chief of 02138. “We were redesigning the entire magazine basically from scratch,” Blum said. Although it still addressed an audience of Harvard alumni, 02138 tried to focus more on issues of national interest, according to Blum. Previously, one of the magazine?...
...progress on that plan was “scrambled” when the state announced the additional cuts, Finucane said. There will be a community meeting on Nov. 6 to allow residents to comment on the strategic plan that CHA is developing. —Staff Writer Sarah J. Howland can be reached at showland@fas.harvard.edu...
...personally beneficial. When you get an opportunity to step back from the day-to-day and look at what the overall picture at the other places is, it really helps you see what the value is in this Harvard experience.” —Staff writer Charles J. Wells can be reached at wells2@fas.harvard.edu...
Sounding a note of tradition, Barbara J. Grosz, a professor of natural sciences, gave her first lecture as the permanent dean of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study in a crowded Radcliffe Gymnasium, yesterday. Grosz, who is the Radcliffe Institute’s second dean since its creation in 1999, was introduced by her predecessor, University President Drew G. Faust. In her introduction, Faust expressed nostalgia for her own first lecture in which she was introduced by then University President Neil L. Rudenstine. Grosz assumed the deanship of the Radcliffe Institute on an interim basis in July 2007 after Faust...
More than 30 groups competed in the first annual i3 “Elevator Pitch” competition, held this past Saturday at Fong Auditorium in Boylston Hall. Nicholas J. Navarro ’10, MIT juniors Sean Liu and Cheuk Leung, and MIT management student Murali Govindaswamy won the first-place prize of $500 with their pitch of a new “wireless mesh technology” that would bring cheaper Internet access to the people of China. The technology that the team plans to establish in China was developed at MIT and has not yet been used...