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...studied both the rowers and the football players over the course of their training season,” Wood said...

Author: By Jessica O. Matthews, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Study Says Heart Rebuilt by Exercise | 5/2/2008 | See Source »

...been doing work with athletes now for about six years,” said Malissa J. Wood, the senior author on the study and a professor at Harvard-affiliated Mass. General. “[And in my work] there has been this long-questioned concept of the athlete’s heart. Did the athlete always have that type of heart, or did it occur by training...

Author: By Jessica O. Matthews, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Study Says Heart Rebuilt by Exercise | 5/2/2008 | See Source »

...food prices. Under the new Farm Bill, corn-based ethanol producers may see their tax credit fall as much as 6 cents per gallon, down to 45 cents. The bill would instead offer a $1-per-gallon subsidy to producers of cellulosic ethanol, made from corn stalks, switchgrass and wood chips, which studies show can be produced more efficiently than corn-based fuel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Will Farm Bill Lower Grocery Tabs? | 4/30/2008 | See Source »

He’s been called director, actor, and producer, but those in the theater community know him best as technician, carpenter, set builder and light designer. Basically, if you need a free-standing, removable 15x4 plank of wood on the set of your play, David S. Jewett ’08—one of this year’s recipients of the Louise Donovan Award—is the person to call. A Minneapolis native, Jewett has always had an interest in theater but only got involved in set construction after coming to Harvard...

Author: By Ross S. Weinstein, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: David S. Jewett '08 | 4/29/2008 | See Source »

...relation between those who create art and those who critique it is notoriously fraught, something that was evident quickly to the standing-room only crowd in Sever Hall last night that watched novelist Jonathan Franzen face English professor James Wood, who has been one of his toughest critics. Wood, who is also a staff writer for The New Yorker, is noted for his censure of the postmodern social novel, which he termed the “contemporary American novel in its big triumphalist form” in a 2001 review of Franzen’s novel...

Author: By Alison S. Cohn, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: With Critic, Franzen Criticizes Criticism | 4/29/2008 | See Source »

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