Word: lectureã
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...time by the Harvard Clock—something happens to group psychology: tardiness ceases to be rude or disrespectful the way it is usually viewed outside of Harvard’s walls. It becomes accepted as commonplace, institutionalized. People show up late to everything, not only lecture??€”club meetings, birthday parties, dinners with friends—but it’s okay, because everyone does it. We Harvard kids are up for a rude awakening our first day on the job, away from the Harvard Bubble and its Harvard Clock. It is not just the students, though?...
...years.McCormick asked for a two-year deferment and has since been planning a series of interdisciplinary projects—including researching isotopes and teeth, making old Latin texts accessible, and starting a summer internship program—which he will begin to execute this year. Wednesday’s lecture??€”led by Thomas Calligaro, the head physicist of the world-renowned Louvre Museum, and Peter Perin, the director of the French Musee d’Archeologie Nationale—focused on the duo’s discoveries of a link between India and France in the 6th century...
...acoustic guitar and harmonica, performed several songs—or, perhaps more accurately put, a couple variations of the same song. The limited range of notes and identical beat of each song made the Amerherst College student’s performance the musical equivalent of an Ec10 lecture??€” exciting material made monotonous and boring...
...department had invited the reclusive John M. Coetzee, the winner of the 2003 Nobel Prize in Literature, to speak at this year’s spring lecture??€”scheduled for April 30. But the author cancelled due to personal reasons, said department members...
...Benjamin Britten, a music commentator, and the author of The Art of Possibility: Transforming Personal and Professional Life, will offer a prefatory note on the music to follow. His lecture promises to be lively and passionate (it is said that two-thirds of the concert audience attends the lecture??€”a loyal following). Sunday, April 27. Lecture 1:45 p.m. Concert 3:00 p.m. Admission $22-$66, $4 discount for seniors and students (2 per ID). Tickets available from the Harvard Box Office, (617) 496-2222 . Sanders Theatre. Open to the public...