Word: tais
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...WorksAdolphus Busch Hall CatherineCarpenter Center Boots!Harvard Yard Stage Dunster House Opera Society presents DHO’s Favorite AriasHolden Chapel Plan B for the Type A’sLoker Commons Dance FestivalLowell Lecture Hall Harvard University Flute Ensemble Presents CarmenMemorial Church Classical Music SelectionsPaine Hall Joyful Noise (Laurence Tai ’06)Phillips Brooks House Jeolla Woodo Iri PangutSanders Theatre Arts First Improv ShowScience Center D7:00 PM Adams House Talent ShowAdams House 7:30 PM Maude and Harold: A Musical Love StoryAdams House Pool Theatre Alice in WonderlandLoeb Drama Center Experimental Theatre 8:00 PM Crimson Dance...
While you were working on your tenth strawberry daq of the day while passed out on the beach in Mexico, the members of the Harvard Tai Chi Tiger Crane Club were eating fried scorpions in China. Jaime Gaurnaccia ’08, David Henderson ’07, Thomas Lowe ’05, Brenda Wong, the fitness trainer at the Business School, and high school senior Jimmy Cheung traveled East for intersession with Master Yon Lee, who’s been the club’s teacher and senior advisor for 20 years. In China, they got to participate...
...know, I can only infer that most AP biology courses do not have the depth or rigor to justify testing out of a college course.” The study’s authors, Sadler and University of Virginia Assistant Professor of Science Education Robert H. Tai, presented their findings on Feb. 17 at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in St. Louis. According to Sadler, the recent findings—which are not yet published—are a portion of a larger ongoing study.The study—which included 500 students...
...print and original online versions of the Feb. 3 news article, "Job Offers Up for Young Historians," incorrectly stated that the director of graduate studies for Harvard's history department is James T. Kloppenberg. In fact, that post is held by Hue-Tam Ho Tai, who is also the Young professor of Sino-Vietnamese history. Kloppenberg is the chair of the department's graduate admissions committee...
...single egg is fertilized and the resulting embryo splits in two. With a clone, the situation is different. Because the cloning process that Hwang says he used to create Snuppy involves two dogs--one for the nucleus and another for the egg--Snuppy's mitochondrial DNA should not match Tai's. That's what Rhee's scientists say they've found and what Hwang undoubtedly hopes the university and Nature will find as well. Final, ironclad proof of Snuppy's provenance would involve showing that the dog's mitochondrial DNA matches that of his egg donor. It's not clear...