All articles
-
Campus & Community
The Big Picture
Harvard Police Officer Jack OKane got his first tattoo on a visit to Ireland from a guy named Danny Bullman, someone he says hell never forget.
-
Campus & Community
Japan scholar Donald Shively dies
Donald Howard Shively, an authority on Japanese urban life and popular culture in the Tokugawa period and chair of the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations at Harvard, where he also served as director of the Japan Institute (now the Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies), died on Aug. 13 in a nursing facility near…
-
Campus & Community
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 is stopping and storing light, making artificial atoms behave in new ways, and doing engineering with superconductivity. When quantum does overtake kilowatts, you can expect…
-
Campus & Community
Bhabha joins Radcliffe as senior adviser in humanities
Homi K. Bhabha, the Anne F. Rothenberg Professor of English and American Literature and Languages in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS), director of the Humanities Center at Harvard, 2004 – 05 Radcliffe Institute fellow, and faculty associate at the institute for the past three years, is now also affiliated with the Radcliffe Institute…
-
Campus & Community
Police reports
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending Sept. 19. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor, and is available online at http://www.hupd.harvard.edu/.
-
Campus & Community
‘Movie Time’ rolls out double feature in the Yard
The fourth annual Movie Time at Harvard – a free, outdoor film screening presented by President Lawrence H. Summers – will be held Sunday (Sept. 25) at 7:15 p.m. in Tercentenary Theatre (between Memorial Church and Widener Library). This years event will be a double feature. Movie Time is open to the entire University community…
-
Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
September 1902 – More than 600 undergraduates arrive in the Class of 1906. Until just before World War I, entering Classes stabilize around this size. September 1906 – The Medical…
-
Campus & Community
Fundraising reaches $590M in fiscal year ’05
Fundraising receipts for the University totaled $590 million in fiscal year 2005, a $50 million increase over fiscal year 2004, Vice President for Alumni Affairs and Development Donella M. Rapier announced today (Sept. 22).
-
Campus & Community
Step right up to first state fair
Tercentenary Theatre will take on the look and feel of a state fair this Friday evening (Sept. 23) as students get the chance to ride a mechanical bull, dunk their deans and House masters, and milk a mock cow. Presented by the College Deans Office, the event – the first-ever campus-wide, welcome-back celebration – will…
-
Campus & Community
Faculty council meeting Sept. 21
At its first meeting of the year on Sept. 21, the Faculty Council discussed the recommendations of the Task Forces on Women Faculty and on Women in Science and Engineering.
-
Campus & Community
Rights, equality center stage at HLS events
Two events at Harvard Law School (HLS) last week (Sept 15-18) focused attention on civil rights and economic equality and included a call to action from U.S. Sen. Barack Obama.
-
Campus & Community
MacArthur ‘Genius’ Grant awarded to Goldie
Public health researcher Sue Goldie, associate professor of health decision science at Harvard School of Public Health, has been awarded a $500,000 MacArthur grant for genius and creativity in applying the tools of decision science to evaluate the clinical benefits, public health impact, and cost-effectiveness of alternative preventive and treatment interventions for viruses that are…
-
Campus & Community
They are born to add
How does someone who hasn’t learned to count yet, say a preschooler, deal with numbers? Adults are comfortable with symbols like “10” to signify 10 balloons, beeps, or beliefs. But…
-
Science & Tech
Ferreting out the first stars
The first stars are so distant and formed so long ago that they are invisible to our best telescopes. Until they explode. Hypernovas (more powerful cousins of supernovas) and their…
-
Campus & Community
Alien abduction claims explained
Abduction stories are strikingly similar. Victims wake up and find themselves paralyzed, unable to move or cry out for help.
-
Science & Tech
First baby photo of stellar twins
Newborn stars are difficult to photograph. They tend to hide in the nebulous stellar nurseries where they formed, enshrouded by thick layers of dust. Now, Smithsonian astronomer T.K. Sridharan (Harvard-Smithsonian…
-
Science & Tech
Survey of Katrina evacuees in Houston: Half trapped in homes waited three days or more for rescue
One-third (34 percent) of Katrina evacuees in a survey reported that they were trapped in their homes and had to be rescued. Half (50 percent) of those who were trapped…
-
Arts & Culture
The Silk Road Ensemble
Yo-Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble perform during Learning From Performers, sponsored by Office for the Arts, September 2005.
-
Campus & Community
It’s ‘Justice’ for all, thanks to HDV project
With the goal of opening the Harvard classroom to distance learners, Harvard alumni, and possibly an international audience, all 26 lectures of Moral Reasoning 22: Justice, taught by Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Professor of Government Michael Sandel, will be filmed in high-definition video this fall.
-
Campus & Community
Four under 35 years old land on ‘TR35’ list
Massachusetts Institute of Technologys Technology Review magazine recently named four Harvard researchers to its 2005 list of top technology innovators under the age of 35. According to the magazine, the TR35 will shape our world for decades to come.
-
Campus & Community
Newsmakers
Sevcenko gets honorary degree Ihor Sevcenko, Dumbarton Oaks Professor of Byzantine History and Literature Emeritus in the Department of the Classics, was awarded an honorary doctorate of liberal arts from…
-
Campus & Community
New HLS institute to explore race, justice
Jesse Climenko Professor of Law Charles J. Ogletree Jr., the founding and executive director of the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice (CHHI) at Harvard Law School (HLS), has announced that the institutes official opening will take place today (Sept. 15).
-
Campus & Community
Constitution Day will be marked by Tribe lecture
Laurence H. Tribe, the Carl M. Loeb University Professor and a nationally recognized expert on constitutional law, will present a lecture open to all students and staff, titled Remembering the Constitutions Future: Anticipating the Roberts Legacy? at noon Monday (Sept. 19) in Lowell Lecture Hall.
-
Campus & Community
Cambridge-Harvard Summer Academy extended five years
The Cambridge-Harvard Summer Academy (CHSA) celebrated its fifth anniversary this summer. Now, thanks to funding from Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers office, it is set to operate for another five years.
-
Campus & Community
Local teens learn to prevail with Project Success
In a darkened lecture hall at Harvard Medical School last month, area high school students presented the work of eight long, summer weeks, talking of platelets and of stem cells, of intestinal bacteria and of vaccines, of sleep deprivation, and of falls in the elderly.
-
Campus & Community
Stem Cell Institute raises first crop of summer interns
Working with zebrafish, growth factors, and chicken embryos, Harvard undergraduates got a chance this summer to learn and work in laboratories of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute during its first summer internship program.
-
Campus & Community
Broadcaster Woodruff named visiting fellow at Shorenstein Center
The Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy located at Harvards Kennedy School of Government recently announced that Judy Woodruff will be a visiting fellow during the fall semester.
-
Campus & Community
Shorenstein names faculty, fellows
The Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy located at the Kennedy School of Government recently announced its fall fellows and visiting faculty.
-
Campus & Community
IOP names its fellows for fall ’05
Harvard Universitys Institute of Politics (IOP), located at the Kennedy School of Government, recently announced the selection of a diverse and experienced group of individuals for fellowships this fall.