All articles


  • Campus & Community

    Oh mercy!

    As the Harvard and Mercyhurst womens hockey teams lined up at center ice for the customary exchange of Good games and handshakes following Saturdays (March 19) triple overtime thriller at Bright Hockey Center, visiting goaltender Desi Clark – the very root of Harvards frustration over the past four hours and 17 minutes – suddenly found…

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    CERtoon winners honored by Greenies The Harvard Green Campus Initiative held an awards luncheon Wednesday (March 23) to honor the winners of the 2005 CERtoon (“carbon emissions reduction”) Cartoon Competition.…

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Eduard Sekler awarded Austria’s Decoration for Science and Art In a March 9 ceremony at the Vienna Hofburg, Austrian President Heinz Fischer awarded the Austrian Decoration for Science and Art…

  • Campus & Community

    Dean Lagemann to change roles

    Ellen Condliffe Lagemann announced March 21 that she will step down as dean of the Graduate School of Education (GSE) at the close of the 2004-05 academic year and will refocus her energies on scholarship and teaching as a member of the GSE faculty.

  • Campus & Community

    College sets 2005-06 tuition, fees

    Harvard College has announced its fees for undergraduate tuition, room, and board for the 2005-06 academic year. Tuition is set at $28,752. Overall charges will total $41,675, an increase of 4.5 percent, including room rate, $5,148 board, $4,430 health services fee, $1,370 and student services fee, $1,975.

  • Campus & Community

    Trichopoulos to receive $5.8 million ‘Innovator Award’ grant

    A renowned cancer epidemiologist, Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) Professor Dimitrios Trichopoulos, has received a U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) Innovator Award to explore fetal and early-life factors associated with adult breast cancer, including whether exposure to hormones such as estrogens and insulin-like growth factors while in the womb may cause the disease years…

  • Campus & Community

    President’s office hours set for April

    President Lawrence H. Summers will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office on the following dates:

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending March 21. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Campus & Community

    Mystery mile

    Looking like he might be trapped inside a modernist sculpture, custodian Marcus Baptist pauses for a moment in the temporary entrance to the music building to peer through a mysterious portal.

  • Campus & Community

    Memorial service set for Ernst Mayr

    A memorial service for Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology Emeritus Ernst Mayr will be held April 29 at 2 p.m. in the Memorial Church. Widely considered the worlds most eminent evolutionary biologist, Mayr joined Harvards Faculty of Arts and Sciences in 1953 and led Harvards Museum of Comparative Zoology from 1961 to 1970.

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    March 16, 1951 – Nieman Fellows produce an issue of “The Harvard Crimson” in which (among other things) the veteran journalists hand out “Oscars” (from the “Harvard Square Academy”) to…

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty Council March 23

    As its 11th meeting of the year on March 23, the Faculty Council discussed the work of the Task Forces on Women Faculty and Women in Science and Engineering. Dean Drew Faust and the chairs of the task forces, Professors Barbara Grosz and Evelynn Hammonds, were present for the discussion.

  • Campus & Community

    Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigators named

    Chemists David R. Liu and Xiaowei Zhuang of Harvard Universitys Faculty of Arts and Sciences are among 43 young researchers nationwide named new investigators of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute Monday (March 21). HHMI will collaborate with Harvard to fund the new investigators research for the next five years, with the possibility for funding renewal…

  • Campus & Community

    New drug therapy cuts risk of second heart attack

    Harvard researchers have found a new treatment for heart attack that provides greater hope for the roughly one in four patients whose heart arteries remain blocked even after standard drug…

  • Campus & Community

    Zoning the Atlantic

    Massachusetts Secretary of Environmental Affairs Ellen Roy Herzfelder outlined Monday (March 21) what state officials hope will become the nation’s first ocean management plan to provide guidance for development projects…

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard experts help sort out U.S. energy future

    John F. Kennedy School of Government energy experts testified to the U.S. Senate’s Energy and Natural Resources Committee this month (March 10) on ways to use clean coal technology to…

  • Campus & Community

    Mystery of how lungs grow is solved

    The puzzle of how lungs grow has been solved. Scientists watching the process in mice embryos have found that budding and branching of new air sacs is driven by the…

  • Campus & Community

    Light detected from alien planets

    Light from two worlds far from our solar system has been detected for the first time. The planets that emit it are too hot to be inhabited, at least by…

  • Health

    Joslin Diabetes Center scientists find genetic defects in immunological tolerance

    The genetic defect keeps the body from properly dealing with “errant” immune cells that it normally eliminates by a process called immunological tolerance. These immune cells then attack the insulin-producing…

  • Health

    Researchers find better way to predict stroke risk in sickle cell anemia patients

    Researchers from Children’s Hospital Boston, Boston University School of Public Health (BUSPH), Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM), Boston Medical Center (BMC) and Harvard Medical School have developed a novel…

  • Campus & Community

    Research in brief

    No link between breast cancer and consumption of chips and fries Researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health and the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, have found no association…

  • Campus & Community

    Weight status of children ages 8 to 15 predicts obesity and high blood pressure in adulthood

    New research shows that children between 8 and 15 years old who are in the upper half of the normal weight range are more likely than their leaner peers to become obese or overweight as young adults. This research was conducted over nearly a decade at the Harvard Medical School (HMS), Harvard Pilgrim Health Care…

  • Campus & Community

    University joins MassCURE to encourage research

    Harvard has joined a new coalition of universities, hospitals, patient organizations, business groups, and scientific societies whose aim is to support embryonic stem cell research in Massachusetts and, specifically, to support pending legislation on stem cell research in the Massachusetts legislature.

  • Campus & Community

    French defense minister predicts closer links with U.S.

    Just days after President Bush returned from a fence-mending visit overseas, Frances defense minister told a Harvard audience that Europe and the United States are positioned to overcome their differences on Iraq and work together in confronting a range of world challenges.

  • Campus & Community

    Sports in brief

    Grumet-Morris grabs Walter Brown Award The Gridiron Club of Greater Boston announced this week that Harvard goalie Dov Grumet-Morris ’05 has been selected as the winner of the 53rd Walter…

  • Campus & Community

    March sadness

    Less than a week after crashing Dartmouths would-be Ivy clinching party with a 70-67 come-from-behind win (a victory that served to snag the Harvard womens basketball team a share of the league prize), the Crimson were turned away from the Big Dance. The snub followed the teams most recent match-up this past Saturday (March 12)…

  • Campus & Community

    Student’s study fosters bipartisan legislation

    Only two weeks after Brian Skotko, a joint-degree student at Harvard Medical School and the Kennedy School of Government, published a paper about problems in physician delivery of a Down syndrome diagnosis in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (AJOG), he has been invited to the nations Capitol for a joint press conference with…

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    Grossman Library to close during Sever Hall renovations The Harvard Extension School’s Grossman Library will be closed beginning May 28 while Sever Hall undergoes major renovations. The library will reopen…

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    NBC News’ Andrea Mitchell to accept Shorenstein award Sponsored by the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy, the Goldsmith Career Award for Excellence in Journalism will…

  • Campus & Community

    Lily Jan named Harvard Foundation’s 2005 Scientist of the Year

    Award-winning biophysicist Lily Jan was named the 2005 Scientist of the Year by the Harvard Foundation of Harvard University. Jan will be awarded the foundations medal at the annual Science Conference ceremony on Friday (March 18) at Pforzheimer House.