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After much fanfare and two years of planning, Harvard’s first permanent pub for undergraduates opened its doors Friday evening, welcoming approximately 1,300 undergraduate revelers to cheap beer and live music. According to Zachary A. Corker ’04, Loker Commons project manager and one of the brains behind the Cambridge Queen’s Head Pub, the night was a resounding success, and the pub’s patrons included a “good mix” of undergraduates and recent graduates. The day after the pub’s grand opening festivities, Corker...

Author: By Aditi Banga, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Beer and Undergrads Flow at Pub | 4/23/2007 | See Source »

...than a decade ago and has been largely absent from the Washington scene since. But he returned a couple of weeks ago to brief his former colleagues on the progress the U.S. and Russia have been making on ridding the world of old, obsolete and unneeded nuclear warheads - a project Nunn conceived at the end of the Cold War with Indiana republican Richard Lugar and has in many ways become his life's work. Since then, the Nunn-Lugar program has dismantled and destroyed more nuclear weapons than are in the combined arsenals of China, France and Great Britain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Nuclear Nightmare | 4/21/2007 | See Source »

Joining the ranks of Count Basie, Duke Ellington, and Thelonious Monk, nine-time Grammy Award winner Eddie Palmieri became Harvard’s latest artist in residence this week, continuing the Office of the Arts’ (OFA) year-long project, The Afro-Cuban Connection. “It’s been a tremendous honor. I had been treated with the highest degree of consideration, working with the students and [Director of Bands] Tom Everett, who is absolutely wonderful, and everyone who is involved in the preparation for the concert—and I appreciate that in my heart...

Author: By Rachel M. Green, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Latin Jazz Pioneer Visits Campus | 4/20/2007 | See Source »

Last Wednesday, three children arrived at Harvard from Balata, a small town in the West Bank, and spoke about the trauma of living under Israeli occupation. This was part of the Picture Balata project, which gives young children, ages 11 to 18, cameras and tells them to document life in their small town. The stories the children told were both emotional and moving. However, why would children be chosen to communicate such a complex and controversial political issue...

Author: By Shai D. Bronshtein | Title: Politicizing the Playground | 4/20/2007 | See Source »

...automatic temperature and lighting controls, computer catalogs—and, now, iPods?Yes, iPods. Alexandra M. Hays ’08-’09 is creating a podcast for the Arthur M. Sackler Museum—a twenty-first century audio guide geared towards the student body. The project, funded by a grant from the Office of the Arts, is intended to encourage student visitorship at the Sackler.Students who volunteered to contribute to the podcast were asked to choose an object in the museum and reflect on what makes it most interesting to them. They were then to summarize...

Author: By Anjali Motgi, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Sackler Turns To Podcasts | 4/20/2007 | See Source »

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