All articles


  • Campus & Community

    Tree huggers

    Outside of the Kennedy School, a couple embraces, either out of affection or a desperate attempt to keep warm.

  • Campus & Community

    Seeing the universe’s most powerful explosion

    Reporting in the May 12 issue of Nature, astronomers announced that they have penetrated the heart of the universe’s most powerful explosion – a gamma-ray burst (GRB). Using the PAIRITEL…

  • Campus & Community

    New delivery technology paves way for disease therapies

    A new way to administer therapeutic RNA molecules that efficiently guides them to cells throughout the body is being reported by researchers at the Harvard-affiliated CBR Institute for Biomedical Research…

  • Campus & Community

    Pros and amateurs team up for discovery

    For the first time, amateur and professional astronomers have teamed up to discover a new planet circling a distant star. The planet was detected by looking for the effect of…

  • Health

    Exercise shown to promote breast cancer survival

    Exercise plays a role in preventing breast cancer, and research strongly suggests that breast cancer patients who are more physically active improve their self-esteem and body image. Now, a landmark study from the Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) finds that exercise after diagnosis may help breast cancer patients live longer.

  • Health

    ‘Brown fat’ cells hold clues for possible obesity treatments

    In laboratory studies of mouse cells, the research team identified genes that govern how precursor cells give rise to mature brown fat cells. There are two main types of fat…

  • Science & Tech

    Witnessing gun violence significantly increases the likelihood that a child will also commit violent crimes

    “Based on this study’s results, showing the importance of personal contact with violence, the best model for violence may be that of a socially infectious disease,” says Felton Earls, MD,…

  • Health

    Imaging may not be major driver of hospital cost increases

    “There have been several news stories and reports from insurers claiming that imaging costs are catching and even surpassing drug costs as major drivers of health care inflation,” says Scott…

  • Health

    Magnetic stimulation may improve stroke recovery

    Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation treatment improved motor function in a small group of people. For the stimulation, an insulated wire coil is placed on the scalp, and an electrical current…

  • Science & Tech

    Amateur and professional astronomers team to find new planet

    Astronomer Scott Gaudi of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics believes that microlensing has the potential for wide use in the future: “With improving technologies and techniques, the first Earth-sized planet…

  • Health

    TB gene identified

    As many as one out of three people in the world are infected with the bacteria that causes tuberculosis, public health experts estimate. That could lead to a global plague…

  • Health

    Insulin prods development of type 1 diabetes

    Joslin Diabetes Center researchers Diane Mathis’s and Christophe Benoist’s finding that the lymph node draining the pancreas was intrinsic to the autoimmune response in mice made David Hafler, HMS professor…

  • Health

    Breathing restored after severe spinal-cord injury

    Keeping an animal functioning after a cervical spinal cord injury is nearly impossible. An American researcher developed the lower spinal cord rat model in the early 1900s. He found that…

  • Health

    Broken hearts may mend after all

    Although adult muscle cells become inflexible after differentiation, these cells temporarily loosen the structure to divide in fetal development. Mark T. Keating found that in some lower vertebrates, heart tissue…

  • Campus & Community

    Inaugural Schelling and Neustadt Awards given to scholar, judge

    A federal judge and a respected social policy writer and scholar were recently honored during the inaugural Richard E. Neustadt and Thomas C. Schelling Awards ceremonies at The Charles Hotel in Cambridge, Mass. The Kennedy School of Government (KSG) hosted the event.

  • Campus & Community

    Emerging democracies and transitions they face explored

    What are the challenges facing emerging democracies? Thats the complex question asked, and partially answered, by a panel of Kennedy School professors on May 13 as part of the 2005 Kennedy School Spring Conference.

  • Campus & Community

    Interns focus on public interest during their college summer

    The Center for Public Interest Careers (CPIC), a collaborative effort of Phillips Brooks House, the Office of Career Services, and the Harvard Alumni Association, aims to expose Harvard College students to the public interest sector during their college summers and at the start of their professional careers. Entering its fourth year, the internship and fellowship…

  • Campus & Community

    Sports in brief

    Eastern Sprints spring gold for Crimson crew The Eastern Association of Rowing Colleges’ 60th annual Eastern Sprints turned up gold for both the Harvard heavies and lightweights on May 15…

  • Campus & Community

    HSPH receives NCI grant

    The Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) has received a grant from the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health, to establish a program to reduce cancer disparities in minority and underserved populations. The program, named MASS CONECT (Massachusetts Community Networks to Eliminate Cancer Disparities through Education, Research and Training), has…

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    Reischauer seeks submissions The deadline for submitting works for the 2005 Noma-Reischauer Essay Prizes in Japanese Studies, given to the best graduate and undergraduate papers on a Japan-related topic, is…

  • Campus & Community

    The Big Picture

    After 10 years as a justice of the peace, Wilma Stahura has plenty of wedding stories.

  • Campus & Community

    Print pals

    HGSE student Sherri Sklar (left) reads with her Amigos School buddy, second-grader Avianna Perez. Managed by Cambridge School Volunteers (CSV), Reading Buddies is a program that pairs adults from the Graduate School of Education and from BookPALS, a program of the Screen Actors Guild Foundation, with young students from a Cambridge public school. At the…

  • Campus & Community

    Reynolds Foundation creates unique fellowship

    In a bold move to eliminate financial barriers for graduate students who will go on to confront some of societys most challenging problems, the Catherine B. Reynolds Foundation is giving $10 million to create a major fellowship program in social entrepreneurship at Harvard University.

  • Campus & Community

    It’s a small, small world for Hongkun Park

    Hongkun Park thinks small to get big results.

  • Campus & Community

    John Fitzgerald Gates named associate dean of College

    John Fitzgerald Gates, a senior adviser to the president and the provost of the University of Vermont, has been named associate dean of Harvard College for administration and finance. Gates will report to Deputy Dean Patricia OBrien. The appointment is effective July 1, 2005.

  • Campus & Community

    University-wide career forum set for June 14

    Employment Services, collaborating with a University-wide organizing committee, is hosting its seventh annual career forum on June 14. This years event will be held at the Graduate School of Designs Gund Hall, 48 Quincy St. The event will be open to the public from 3 to 7 p.m.

  • Campus & Community

    Thirty years of entertainment, example, energy, learning from performers

    For 30 years, Learning From Performers has been bringing artists to Harvard to lecture, teach, and interact with students. Just a partial list of the performers who have spent anywhere from a day to a week at Harvard under the auspices of the program is enough to widen the eyes of even the moderately starstruck…

  • Campus & Community

    HRO strikes up the band for kids

    Sitting forward and big-eyed in their seats, or leaning back with eyes closed and only their ears open, a recent Sanders Theatre audience let the sounds of Mozart, Beethoven, and Brahms inspire them, amuse them, thrill them, bring them a momentary moment of peace. Nothing unusual about that – except in this case the audience…

  • Campus & Community

    Herchel Smith Harvard Summer Fellows named

    Thirty Harvard undergraduates have been named recipients of the second annual Herchel Smith Harvard Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowships. After seven pilot projects were awarded last year, 2005 marks the first year of a full cohort of fellows. The program is designed to support promising undergraduate scientists in a formative, self-designed laboratory experience at the early…

  • Campus & Community

    John Rawls

    At a Meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences April 12, 2005, the following Minute was placed upon the records.