All articles


  • Campus & Community

    Summers donates books to four local schools

    Un libro te lleva al cualquier sitio que tu quieras: a book takes you wherever you want to go, 9-year-old Gabriel Castro told Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers on Friday (April 26).

  • Science & Tech

    New type of matter may have been found

    In orbit around Earth, a satellite called the Chandra X-ray Observatory surveys the universe for sources of X-rays. Using Chandra, a scientist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics has observed…

  • Science & Tech

    Physicians who are experts on managed care avoid enrolling in HMOs

    Researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health and RAND surveyed 279 professors at 17 universities across the country who were prominent experts in managed care to find out their…

  • Campus & Community

    Committee to Protect Journalists honored

    The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has been selected by Harvards Nieman Fellows to receive the 2002 Louis Lyons Award for Conscience and Integrity in Journalism.

  • Campus & Community

    An end to a distinguished career

    On April 10, the Harvard Cyclotron Laboratory (HCL) treated its last patient.

  • Campus & Community

    Lights! Camera! Doctors!

    Does your doctor sing? Does your dentist tap dance?

  • Campus & Community

    Cornell kills hope for Crimson crown

    For a team that was forced to share last seasons Ivy crown with the Harvard softball squad (thanks to some late-season Harvard heroics), Cornells 5-1 win over the Crimson this past Sunday (April 21) was a fitting bit of redemption for the Big Red. As Cornell drilled five hits in the fifth inning against Harvard…

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    Teen conference is set for Arab Americans

  • Campus & Community

    Gender transcends disciplines

    From street vendors in India to fighter pilots in the U.S. Air Force, from teen pregnancy to religious asceticism, issues of gender united academics from around Harvard Friday (April 19) in an unusual cross-disciplinary conference.

  • Campus & Community

    Letting nature do the work

    The scientist put what looked like black dust into a dish of water. Instead of dust, however, the particles were actually diodes, capable of emitting light under the right conditions. In the dish sat a cylinder, patterned with tiny dots of solder connected by threadlike lines of solder. The goal of the experiment was to…

  • Campus & Community

    Summers donates 750 books to four Cambridge elementary schools

    “Un libro te lleva al cualquier sitio que tu quieras“: a book takes you wherever you want to go, 9-year-old Gabriel Castro told Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers on Friday…

  • Campus & Community

    Antiques from Late Antiquity

    If you think globalization is a recent phenomenon, check out the exhibition in the newly renovated Divinity School library, Light From the Age of Augustine: Late Antique Ceramics From North Africa (Tunisia).

  • Campus & Community

    Losing control

    Its one of the first things children learn when they start school – no gum chewing! Dubble Bubble, Chiclets, Dentyne, Wrigleys Spearmint – all verboten! And dont even think about leaving the chewed wad stuck to anything.

  • Campus & Community

    Pluralism Project to host women of all faiths

    The third consultation on womens networks in multireligious America will be held at Harvard University this Saturday (April 27) through Monday (April 29). This consultation builds on two previous conversations hosted by the Pluralism Project, under the direction of Diana Eck, professor of comparative religion and Indian Studies.

  • Campus & Community

    Chris Lydon to deliver Lowell Lecture

    Journalist Christopher Lydon will deliver the annual Lowell Lecture, A Culture Trying to Happen, on Tuesday (May 7) at 8 p.m. in Science Center C. The Lowell Lecture is devoted to explorations of major issues of our time and is jointly sponsored by the Lowell Institute of Boston and the Harvard University Extension School.

  • Campus & Community

    Finally – a home for cinephiles

    Not long ago at the Harvard Film Archive (HFA) more than 20 Harvard community movie hounds showed up for the inaugural meeting of Cinephiles Unite, a new special interest group started by Harvard Neighbors (HN) that connects film lovers from across the University with screenings and movie chat. The featured film on this occasion was…

  • Campus & Community

    Two are recognized by College

    Harvard College has selected Laura E. Clancy 02-03 as the winner of the 2002 Harvard College Womens Leadership Award for her exceptional leadership skills.

  • Campus & Community

    Leakey: Save the Serengeti

    In his introductory remarks at a lecture Sunday night (April 21) sponsored by the Museum of Natural History (HMNH) at Sanders Theatre, Mellon Professor of the Sciences and Pellegrino University Professor Emeritus E.O. Wilson called Richard Leakey a heroic figure whose life is an epic. He briefly recounted Leakeys bio: The son of the paleoanthropologists…

  • Campus & Community

    Arts First fetes 10 years with 225 events

    For the 10th straight year, Harvard will explode with the creative outpouring of students, faculty, and alumni next weekend (May 2 – 5), as Arts First fills the entire campus with a riot of color, sound, and motion.

  • Campus & Community

    Many tiny ‘watches’ keep body’s time

    The daily rhythms of the body – once thought to be strictly governed by a master clock lodged in the brain – appear to be driven to a remarkable degree by tiny timepieces pocketed in organs all over the body. Whats more, these peripheral timepieces appear to be strikingly idiosyncratic in appearance – more like…

  • Campus & Community

    HBS students review grants for foundation

    Giving money away can be every bit as rewarding – and challenging – as making it.

  • Campus & Community

    Bratt is new fellow at Center for Housing Studies

    Rachel G. Bratt, a leading expert on the housing and community development sectors, has been named a fellow at Harvards Joint Center for Housing Studies. Bratt is a professor at Tufts University, where she served as a chair of the Department of Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning from 1995 to 2001. She has been…

  • Campus & Community

    Mental Health Awareness Week works

    I contemplated taking too many pills less than a week after I arrived at Harvard. Depression was tightening its grip on my mind, and I was certain that I was powerless to stop it. In the world according to depression, you did not earn any of the positive things that happen in your life, and…

  • Campus & Community

    Herchel Smith gives Harvard $100 million

    Herchel Smith, a distinguished chemist and philanthropist, recently bequeathed to Harvard new legacies that, when combined with his lifetime generosity, could amount to $100 million over time to support graduate fellowships, new science professorships, and an exchange program for postdoctoral fellows between Harvard and Cambridge universities. The gift, which is among the largest ever received…

  • Campus & Community

    ARCO Forum addresses Colombian terror

    A four-decade-old civil war and more than a decade of narco-terrorism have left Colombias civil institutions bruised and bloody, seriously undermining Latin Americas oldest democracy. Every 20 minutes a Colombian is killed almost 40,000 Colombians have been killed in the past decade. Approximately 1.6 million of Colombias 40 million people are poverty-stricken refugees who have…

  • Campus & Community

    Community Gifts beats own record

    In spite of a sluggish regional and national economy, Harvard employees dug deeper than ever to help those in need, pushing the 2001 – 2002 Community Gifts Through Harvard over its $1 million goal and 12 percent over last years total. In all, Harvard faculty, staff and retirees donated $1,053,756 to charities through one-time donations…

  • Campus & Community

    The Big Picture

    Hiking to the far reaches of his classroom and laboratory – 3,000 wooded acres in Petersham – Harvard Forest director David Foster stops to admire a small plot of trees that have been pulled down by researchers to simulate the effect of a hurricane.

  • Campus & Community

    It’s the missing data, stupid!

    Xiao-Li Meng is a bit different from other scientists. He not only works with the data he has, he works with the data he doesnt have.

  • Campus & Community

    Shlien to be remembered at Memorial Church

    A memorial service will be held for John Shlien, professor of education and counseling psychology emeritus, at the Memorial Church on May 29 at 3 p.m. The service will be followed by a reception in the Eliot-Lyman Room of Longfellow Hall. Shlien died March 23 at his vacation home in Big Sur, Calif. He was…

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    A complete police report will appear in next weeks Gazette.