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...several Latino employees of Harvard who claimed they were notified last month that they would be laid off in January. A flyer written by one of the affected employees alleged that the Office of Animal Resources (OAR) said it would fire four Latino animal technicians in the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology (MCB). The flyer also alleged that OAR has a “history of hostility...towards Latino workers.” At last night’s meeting—the second one on this topic—three of the four workers and members of their...

Author: By Brenda C. Maldonado, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Latino Workers Decry ‘Hostility’ | 11/20/2006 | See Source »

...residents of Mower A-21 are no strangers to late nights spent over gaming consoles, and their room reflects it. Hundreds of DVDs and games for various systems jostle for space with such ponderous volumes as War and Peace and a molecular biology textbook, while Nintendo 64 cartridges occupy their own floor compartment. When it comes to the contests that play out on the room’s 32-inch Sony television, the Mower suite’s residents have many means of sorting out the true champions from the mere dabblers. Their collection of consoles includes...

Author: By Christian B. Flow, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Console Debut Stokes Student Gamer Interest | 11/17/2006 | See Source »

...many Asian-American students feel they don’t yet have.“The hardest thing for me was realizing that [my concentration] is a stereotype. I didn’t know until I was in my late teens, and that was difficult,” says Molecular and Cellular Biology concentrator Alisa T. Zhang ’08. She is typical of Asian students concentrating in sciences, who are aware of the stereotype and struggle to resist being limited by it. The externally positive nature of the Asian stereotype—So good at math! So skilled...

Author: By and Alwa A. Cooper, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS | Title: Fighting for Depth | 11/15/2006 | See Source »

Anthropology Astronomy Celtic languages and literature Classics Computer science Earth and planetary sciences Engineering and applied sciences English and American literature and language Environmental science and public policy Folklore and mythology Germanic languages and literatures Government History History of art and architecture Linguistics Literature Mathematics Molecular and cellular biology Near Eastern languages and civilizations Neurobiology, organismic and evolutionary biology Philosophy Physics Psychology Romance languages and literatures Sanskrit and Indian studies Slavic languages and literatures Sociology Statistics Visual and environmental studies Studies of women, gender, and sexuality

Author: By Johannah S. Cornblatt, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Major Expansion in Minor Options | 11/7/2006 | See Source »

...child psychologist, and David Gould, an administrator at a private school in Columbus, Ohio--were determined to get to the bottom of it. On the urging of someone on a myopathy e-mail discussion list, they went to see Dr. John Shoffner, a neurologist and geneticist at Horizon Molecular Medicine, a private group in Atlanta. A few weeks later, a fax arrived with Shoffner's diagnosis. Asher was suffering from a type of mitochondrial disease...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Health: When Cells Stop Working | 11/5/2006 | See Source »

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