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Carola A. Cintron-arroyo
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Solar Trashbins Join Green Push
A little more than a year after University President Drew G. Faust vowed to cut Harvard’s net greenhouse gas emissions
Gore Plan Favored in Town Hall Meeting
In a town hall discussion this weekend, a group of Massachusetts environmental activists called for the federal government to implement
Pfoho To Begin Food Composting
Despite lacking the latest equipment, Pforzheimer Dining Hall will soon join Annenberg and several other House dining halls in daily
Evangelist, Scientist Discuss Climate
A Nobel-prize winning scientist and a former lobbyist for the National Association of Evangelicals shared the stage at the Harvard
Writers Discuss Nature Lit.
Writers and nature-lovers gathered to discuss “Nature and the Written Word” yesterday evening at the Barker Center during a roundtable
Panel Discusses Genocide Convention
The ramifications of the 1948 United Nations Genocide Convention, as well as today’s anti-genocide initiatives, were discussed in a commemorative
Defector Sheds Light On North Korean Govt.
Jin-Hye Jo, a North Korean defector who escaped the oppressive regime of Kim Sung-il and his son Kim Jong-il, told
Hooligan Bids for Presidency
Even Michael C. Koenigs ’09 acknowledges his campaign for Undergraduate Council president is a joke. While his opponents flog proposals
Students Debate Latin American Human Rights Issues
Looking to recent efforts of grassroots organizations in the region, students debated the merits of “trickle-down” and “trickle-up” approaches to
Pinker Discusses Language
Psychology professor Steven Pinker addressed the role of language in studying human nature in front of a crowded room at
Advocate Talks Green Incentives
The “blatantly obvious” monetary incentives for increasing energy efficiency should move the United States toward a more energy frugal future,
Gene Linked to Heart Disease in Diabetics
A new study by a team of researchers at Harvard Medical School found a correlation between a genetic variant and
Life of Architect Gets a Reading
For years, Le Corbusier, a major modernist architect of the twentieth century, was admired exclusively for his art, biographer Nicholas
Undergrads Present Research At 3rd Annual Symposium
Undergraduate science researchers presented their work to peers and faculty members at Saturday’s Third Annual Undergraduate Research Symposium, which was
Former Sex Slave Speaks Out
Kang Il Chul, a South Korean woman abducted from her home at age fifteen and forced into sex slavery during