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Novartis wants to make its facilities in Cambridge the model for a new kind of drug research—they want to work closely with professors from Harvard and MIT and use cutting-edge research on the human genome to tailor their cures to specific diseases...

Author: By Elizabeth S. Widdicombe, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Candy Plant To Shift From Sugar to Science | 4/28/2003 | See Source »

...sciences and further expand Harvard’s renown in fields outside the humanities. Pinker’s arrival here will be a decisive step in that process. His controversial study of the extent to which evolutionary forces and the genes shaped by them control individual human nature seems tailor-made for Harvard’s Mind, Brain and Behavior program...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, | Title: Acquiring A Great Mind | 4/11/2003 | See Source »

Tracking Expos would be beneficial for all parties involved; it would be better for students at all writing levels, and would allow the preceptors to tailor their lessons more specifically to the students in their section, who would all possess similar writing abilities...

Author: By Zachary S. Podolsky, | Title: Expos 10, 20, 30... | 4/3/2003 | See Source »

...other people - British airmen trying to dodge American missiles, members of the 101st Airborne hoping to survive a night's sleep and countless Iraqi grunts and civilians - experienced an Oscar week so taxing that they didn't live to see the ceremony. Have some sympathy, please, for a tailor's publicist facing the wartime challenge of getting Jennifer Lopez into one of his client's gowns. And, Lo, she looked ravishing in a vintage off-the-shoulder Grecian-style number (that was once worn by Jacqueline Kennedy) with flowered brocade edging I last saw on my Aunt Margaret's bedspread...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hollywood Goes to War — Not! | 3/24/2003 | See Source »

Still, nearly every major-media company would love to buy Discovery. Not only does Hendricks have a loyal, upscale audience and relatively low production costs, but he also controls a vast library of recyclable content that travels easily across most cultural and political boundaries--and is tailor-made for video-on-demand, a service that cable operators are starting to roll out. And he has Judith McHale, a veteran of the early days of MTV, who, as Discovery's president, runs the firm day to day. McHale is a savvy dealmaker who "has an underlying respect for people that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TV's Unlikely Empire | 3/3/2003 | See Source »

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