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...arrived. In the B-52, Pilot Charles C. Bock checked his air speed (450 knots), asked Scott Crossfield on the intercom if he was set. The reply: "I'm ready when you are, buddy." Bock went through a five-second countdown, then punched a red button on his control panel. With a metallic click a locking device opened, and the X-15 dropped silently on a long, fast, powerless glide toward the desert floor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SPACE: Flight of the X- 1 5 | 4/21/2006 | See Source »

...joined by Lan Xue, a professor at the Tsinghua University School of Public Policy in Beijing, as well as two Harvard scholars—an emeritus professor, Ezra F. Vogel, and the director of KSG’s China Public Policy Program, Anthony J. Saich—on a panel about “China’s soft power...

Author: By Lewis E. Bollard, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Professor Praises China’s Diplomacy | 4/20/2006 | See Source »

...initially with reference to the United States. In a 2004 Foreign Affairs article, he described “soft power” as the “ability to attract others by the legitimacy of U.S. policies and the values that underlie them.” China, the panel observed, is increasingly using diplomacy, culture, and popular appeal to conduct its foreign policy...

Author: By Lewis E. Bollard, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Professor Praises China’s Diplomacy | 4/20/2006 | See Source »

During his time on the Corporation, he served on the search committee that named Neil L. Rudenstine to be Harvard’s 26th president in 1991. When he led the panel that ultimately picked Summers, The Crimson termed Stone “Harvard’s kingmaker.” The Crimson reported at the time that Stone often took financial aid students to the Faculty Club when he came to campus for Corporation meetings...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: Robert G. Stone Jr. '45-'47, Who Led Panel That Picked Summers as Chief, Dies at Age 83 | 4/20/2006 | See Source »

While scores of College seniors turned in hundred-page theses, over a dozen engineering students dazzled a panel of faculty judges last week with final projects that may just change the face of the sciences. The Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences held its Senior Engineering Design Project Awards Ceremony last Friday for seniors enrolled in two engineering design project courses. William J. Adams Jr. ’06 nabbed a first-place finish for his microelectrode array for in vitro cardiac electrophysiological experimentation, which is a “device used to measure extracellular potential of cultured heart cells...

Author: By Muriel Payan, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Engineering Students Lauded | 4/19/2006 | See Source »

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