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...current team should he ever make it to the NHL.“I’ve always wanted to play in Pittsburgh, but right now the Rangers are obviously my first choice,” Reese said. “They are a class organization, the way they treat you. First class all the way.”With Hartford’s season over after a Game 7 loss on Sunday evening, Reese has a long summer ahead of him to look back on his time at Harvard with fond memories, yet also to look ahead and realize...

Author: By Barrett P. Kenny, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Reese Makes Most of Minor League Stop | 4/30/2007 | See Source »

...same Newsweek poll, only 68 percent of respondents said they believe someone can be both atheist and moral, and a mere 38 percent of registered voters said that would even consider voting for a political candidate who is atheist. These startling figures make it clear why many nonbelievers treat the “A” word as a scarlet letter...

Author: By Jimmy Y. Li | Title: Coming Out Of The (Atheist) Closet | 4/27/2007 | See Source »

...abject poverty right next to one of the greatest academic institutions in the world. They make us grateful for our comfortable environment, yet saddened by their wretched state. I don’t have an answer on how to eliminate homelessness, but I do believe that we can all treat them more like humans...

Author: By Lumumba Seegars | Title: Facing Our Neighbors | 4/27/2007 | See Source »

...Science. Now a report in the American Naturalist explains just why Ebola is spreading among the animals so furiously--and shows how it could be stopped, according to lead author Peter Walsh of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology in Leipzig, Germany. The epidemiological tactics used to treat outbreaks of human scourges like E. coli hold the answer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why Ebola is Killing Gorillas | 4/26/2007 | See Source »

Harvard scientists called for more attention to controlling malaria at a high-profile symposium yesterday that signalled a push to use genetic technology to treat diseases in the developing world. “Genetics has not made the contribution to infectious diseases it should have,” said Eric S. Lander, a leader of the Human Genome Project and director of the Broad Institute, a joint venture between Harvard and MIT that specializes in genomics. Lander said genetic applications to medicine have largely focused on “first-world diseases,” such as cancer. The conference...

Author: By Shoshana S. Tell, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Symposium Tackles Malaria | 4/26/2007 | See Source »

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