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...world where Botticellian references are fetishized and primary colors are scoffed at, “Patience” may be required. Any Gilbert and Sullivan experience can be slightly overwhelming, but the Harvard-Radcliffe Gilbert and Sullivan Players succeed in making Victorian operetta engaging and accessible for a twenty-first century audience. “Patience, or Bunthorne’s Bride,” which ran at the Agassiz Theatre April 3-12, was an ambitious project, but the Players, under director David S. Jewett ’08, engaged the audience from the moment the conductor invited them...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Parody Requires ‘Patience’ | 4/14/2008 | See Source »

Bush is home from his last long tour abroad; the political world is focused on the race to succeed him; his lieutenants are leaving to write books explaining all that was not their fault. There is no way to know what he makes of this or how he processes the price of his policies. But the Tuesday medal ceremony, when he stood by George and Sally Monsoor and told Michael's story, provided a glimpse--not of a President with any doubt of the justice of his cause but certainly of a man reckoning with its cost. Bush talked about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Reckoning. | 4/10/2008 | See Source »

...More than 50 billion dollars in new funding has been made available this decade for health delivery programs in AIDS and other diseases; however, in order for these efforts to succeed in developing effective health systems that are accessible by the poor, universities must continue to support the quantitative and qualitative research that establishes decision-making principles in global health delivery. Universities must also commit to training a generation of future leaders, especially those from developing nations, in the multi-disciplinary field of global health delivery. Just as medical schools require two years of hands-on training through clinical rotations...

Author: By Matthew F. Basilico and Jason Zhang | Title: Stepping Up Harvard's Leadership in Global Health | 4/10/2008 | See Source »

...brotherhood that you form with the guys that you wouldn’t get at a coed school,” Ahlborn says. While they miss the closeness that they felt at their small, single-sex schools, many agree that this same closeness helped them develop confidence to succeed, if not socially, than at least academically at Harvard.“There was such a strong sense of community that conversations were encouraged,” Zaza says. “I now feel very comfortable talking to professors, TFs, and non-students.” All-girls schools also...

Author: By Samantha F. Drago, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: When Boy Meets Girl | 4/9/2008 | See Source »

...opportunity to be at Harvard because it definitely feels like a fit for me,” she continues. “I have an amazing team and great coaches to excel as a player, but I also get the academics that I really need as a person to succeed in other areas of my life.”This desire to become a fully-rounded person in addition to honing abilities on the field is characteristic of Nichols’ outlook. With a joint concentration in History & Literature and History of Art & Architecture, soccer proves not just a release...

Author: By Allen J. Padua, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Midfielder Takes Game To Next Level | 4/8/2008 | See Source »

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