All articles
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Science & Tech
Lukin illuminates quantum science
Mikhail Lukin thinks that devices based on quantum science are at the same stage as radios were about 100 years ago. To catch up, the recently tenured professor of physics…
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Campus & Community
Practicing ‘best practices’
Dual concerns about Harvard’s environmental impact and skyrocketing energy costs have prompted facilities managers across the University to come together monthly to share thoughts, tips, and techniques for making Harvard…
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Campus & Community
Chinese salt evidence spared from flood
American and Chinese researchers digging at an imperiled site of ancient salt production found the earliest known evidence of salt manufacturing in China.
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Campus & Community
New cancer detector developed that’s fast, sensitive, reliable
Cancers and many other diseases often reveal themselves by the presence of proteins absent or inactive in people who do not suffer from such ailments. Researchers are finding new biomarkers,…
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Health
How ant (and human) societies might grow
Pellegrino University Professor Emeritus Edward O. Wilson remains fascinated with the highly organized societies of ants, bees, wasps, termites, and humans. He and Bert Holldobler, with whom he shared a…
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Campus & Community
Picnicking with the Prez
In Harvard Yard, first-years took time off from gobbling down hot dogs, hamburgers, and doughnuts to wait patiently in a long line and get a chance to shoot the breeze with the president. On this warm September day, President Lawrence H. Summers and a bunch of upperclassmen hung out in the Yard and extended a…
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Campus & Community
Center for Ethics selects graduate fellows
The Edmond J. Safra Foundation Center for Ethics has selected six graduate fellows in ethics for the 2005-06 academic year. The fellows, who study ethical problems in law, political science, philosophy, and medicine, were chosen from a pool of outstanding Harvard graduate students who are writing dissertations or are engaged in major research on topics…
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Campus & Community
Harvard to host LBGT film series
This fall, Harvard will host its first Lesbian, Bisexual, Gay, and Transgender (LBGT) Film Series. This inaugural event seeks to examine and celebrate representations of lesbian, bisexual, gay, and transgender life and culture in cinema during the four decades since the 1969 Stonewall Rebellion in New York Citys Greenwich Village ignited the modern gay rights…
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Campus & Community
Thomas B. Fitzpatrick
At a Meeting of the Faculty of Medicine December 15, 2004, the following Minute was placed upon the records.
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Campus & Community
Serbian president calls for economic development
Newly elected Serbian President Boris Tadic said a democratic Serbia and Montenegro could be a regional force for stability and economic growth, but warned that moves to further fragment the nation would work against those goals.
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Campus & Community
Eleven top academics join KSG faculty
Eleven leading academics and practitioners whose expertise ranges from health policy to Latin American studies have been named new faculty members at Harvards Kennedy School of Government (KSG), Dean David T. Ellwood recently announced.
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Campus & Community
Lecture series to explore digital horizons
Former Google Chief Operations Engineer Jim Reese will share the secrets of how he helped the search engine grow from 300 servers when he joined the company in 1999 to 10,000 today in a talk scheduled for Wednesday (Sept. 28).
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Campus & Community
HSPH announces new appointments
Dockery named new chair of Dept. of Environmental Health Harvard Professor of Environmental Epidemiology Douglas Dockery has been named chair of the Department of Environmental Health at the Harvard School…
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Campus & Community
Kemp to deliver Dunlop Lecture on Gulf Coast ‘renaissance’
Former secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Jack Kemp will deliver the seventh annual John T. Dunlop Lecture, An American Renaissance for the Gulf Coast, on Sept. 28 at 6 p.m. in the Graduate School of Designs Piper Auditorium. A reception will be held at 7 p.m. in Stubbins Room, Gund…
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Campus & Community
Sports in brief
Team HMS reaches beach among top 30 finishers A dozen Harvard Medical School students placed 23rd overall out of 285 running clubs in the seventh annual Reach the Beach Relay…
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Campus & Community
In brief
Du Bois Institute to present Katznelson Author Ira Katznelson will read from his new book, “When Affirmative Action Was White: An Untold History of Racial Inequality in 20th Century America,”…
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Campus & Community
Parrots and ‘possums and snakes, oh my!
Education and thrills combined as tentative little fingers stretched out to caress the baby American alligator and the red rat snake under the eyes of watchful parents at the Harvard Museum of Natural History (HMNH) recently. Other creatures featured at the Harvard Museums annual Community Day, drawing oohs and aahs from children and adults alike,…
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Campus & Community
OfA grants to foster artistic initiatives
More than 700 students will participate in 27 projects in dance, music, theater, and multidisciplinary genres at Harvard University this fall, sponsored in part through the grant program of the Office for the Arts (OfA). These grants are designed to foster creative and innovative artistic initiatives among Harvard undergraduates.
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Campus & Community
Campus-wide contest seeks artful, sustainable solutions
The Harvard Green Campus Initiative is sponsoring an art and design competition this fall with $10,000 in cash prizes for the best visions of a sustainable Harvard campus.
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Campus & Community
HBS completes library restoration
Harvard Business School (HBS) formally reopened Baker Library – the historic building capped with a bell tower that has been the symbol of the School for over 75 years – marking the conclusion of an extensive two-year, $53.4 million renovation and expansion project.
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Campus & Community
Program on U.S.-Japan Relations names fellows
Harvards Program on U.S.-Japan Relations recently selected 17 fellows for the 2005-06 academic year. Founded in 1980, the program enables outstanding scholars and practitioners to come together to conduct independent research and participate in an ongoing dialogue with other members of the Harvard and Greater Boston communities.
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Campus & Community
Dept. of Ophthalmology awarded blindness prevention grants
The Harvard Medical School (HMS) Department of Ophthalmology has been awarded a $110,000 grant from Research to Prevent Blindness (RPB). The grant will help support research into the causes, treatment, and prevention of diseases that cause blindness. Henry Willard Williams Professor of Ophthalmology Joan W. Miller, chair of the Department of Ophthalmology at Harvard Medical…
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Campus & Community
Australian fellowship open to Harvard students
The American Australian Association (AAA) recently announced that it is sponsoring its second year of United States to Australia Fellowships. The program will provide up to four awards totaling $80,000 to outstanding American students to pursue graduate and postdoctoral studies and research in life and ocean sciences, medicine, engineering, or mining at top Australian universities…
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Campus & Community
J. Wayne Streilein
Wayne Streilein once quoted a Zen proverb: A garden is never complete until there is nothing left to remove. In that statement, one can appreciate Waynes view of his own lifes work. His career was dedicated to spirited inquiry, and driven by novel insights. Waynes impact on science extends far beyond the discipline of immunology,…
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Campus & Community
RMO workshops to cover electronic record keeping
To help Harvard staff improve the organization of their files, the Universitys Records Management Office (RMO) is offering workshops on electronic record keeping. These workshops provide practical guidance on filing systems, filing rules and procedures, and equipment and supplies. This year, a new section will cover such issues as version control and naming conventions, and…
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Campus & Community
Andrews, HBS professor, Twain scholar, 89
Kenneth R. Andrews, who began his academic career as an authority on Mark Twain and went on to become a renowned professor at Harvard Business School (HBS), a founder of the field of corporate strategy, editor of the Harvard Business Review, and a beloved master of Leverett House, died on Sept. 4 at his home…
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Campus & Community
Ruggie named UN special representative
Evron and Jeane Kirkpatrick Professor of International Affairs John Ruggie was appointed as UN Secretary-General Kofi Annans special representative on the issue of human rights and transnational corporations and other business enterprises this past month. Ruggie served as UN assistant secretary-general and adviser to Annan on strategic planning from 1997 to 2001.
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Campus & Community
Seeking a successor
A stubborn Harvard football team made do without its marquee player from last season – Ivy League Player of the Year Ryan Fitzpatrick 05 – to earn a come-from-behind win in their season opener opposite host Holy Cross this past Saturday afternoon (Sept. 17). The 31-21 victory extended the Crimsons winning ways to a dozen…
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Campus & Community
Divine progress
Harvard Divinity School (HDS) held its convocation Sept. 20, marking the 50th anniversary of the Schools admission of women.
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Campus & Community
Newsmakers
Meselson named NYAS honorary life member Thomas Dudley Cabot Professor of the Natural Sciences Matthew Meselson was recently named an honorary life member of the New York Academy of Sciences…