All articles


  • Campus & Community

    Anthrax toxin receptor discovered

    Researchers at Harvard Medical School and the University of Wisconsin Medical School have found the docking protein, or receptor, for anthrax toxin. The long-sought protein is thought to be the first point of contact between the toxin and the cell it will eventually destroy.

  • Campus & Community

    Wages forum held at ARCO

    About 150 people turned out for the Harvard Committee on Employment and Contracting Policies’ open forum at the Kennedy School of Government’s ARCO Forum Monday (Oct. 22). The forum, which…

  • Campus & Community

    Freeman Fellows announced in Social Medicine

    The Department of Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School recently welcomed four fellows to its Freeman Foundation Chinese and Southeast Asian Fellowship and Cultural Exchange Program. The program, now in its fifth year (having resumed after a one-year sabbatical in 1999-00), aims to promote cross-cultural exchange and dialogue in the field of medical anthropology. Of…

  • Campus & Community

    Oh Yoko!

    It was arts and crafts night with a twist this past Sunday evening (Oct. 21) in the Carpenter Center pit, as glue, tape, twine, shattered pottery, and Yoko Ono all came together to commemorate her latest installation, Mend Piece to the World. The outdoor exercise of mending shattered pottery offered the large crowd an opportunity…

  • Campus & Community

    Robots move into operating room

    Robots made the surgical team last year, providing remarkably tremor-free and precise hands for surgeons. They also offer the benefit of smaller incisions and shorter recovery times. But these high-tech devices, which the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved for use in minimally invasive gallbladder and gastroesophageal reflux disease surgery, havent made a surgeons job…

  • Campus & Community

    Community Gifts sets high goals for itself

    Approximately 200 representatives from offices across the University gathered in the Ropes Gray Room of the Law School on Oct. 24 for a luncheon kicking off the 2001 Community Gifts through Harvard Campaign.

  • Campus & Community

    Bok Center fetes birthday

    Twenty-five years ago, when research ruled at Harvard, President Derek Bok set out on a seemingly quixotic mission to increase incentives for teaching. His campaign created the Derek Bok Center for Teaching and Learning, which marked its 25th anniversary Friday (Oct. 19).

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Gardner honored in Italy

  • Campus & Community

    CBG announces its fall fellows

    The new fall fellows at the Center for Business and Government (CBG) at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG) include high-level bank and finance officers from Asia, Internet entrepreneurs, leading policy-makers, and top researchers from around the world. The fellows will tackle projects ranging from charting political and economic reform in China to creating an…

  • Campus & Community

    And the streak goes on

    In a season marked by near-perfect execution, the most ordinary blunder can seem downright freaky. So when the Harvard football team (5-0, 2-0 Ivy) committed four turnovers (and enough bad snaps to fill a beatnik café) against Ivy rival Princeton (1-4, 1-2 Ivy), it seemed as if Halloween had made an early appearance this past…

  • Campus & Community

    Kagan, Coates are appointed HLS professors

    Elena Kagan, a former senior White House official, and John Coates, once a high-powered corporate attorney, have been appointed professors of law at the Law School (HLS). Kagan is an expert in administrative law, while Coates is a corporate and financial law specialist.

  • Campus & Community

    Student authors exposed

    When eight members of the class of 2004 returned to Harvard this fall, they had to make an adjustment uncommon to other sophomores. During the summer they had become published authors and were soon to become household names among the new freshman class.

  • Campus & Community

    The Big Picture

    Rachel, a young shiatsu practitioner, grips Kathleen Whites left wrist and announces that her pulse is a little slow. I probably need some sleep, White says, and I wont get any till after Halloween.

  • Campus & Community

    There’s no place like home

    There’s no place like home ‘Nest!’, a public artwork created by the Reclamation Artists in collaboration with Harvard students, explores the concept of ‘home’ as it relates to the multiple…

  • Campus & Community

    Vichniac is director of Radcliffe Fellowship Program

    Judith Vichniac, the former director of studies for the Committee on Degrees in Social Studies and a senior lecturer in Harvard College since 1989, has been appointed the director of the Radcliffe Institute Fellowship Program at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. She began her duties in September.

  • Campus & Community

    Heads Up: Looking at the changing face of humanity

    Chewing has changed the face of humankind.

  • Campus & Community

    Westheimer, former assistant dean of GSAS, dies at 86

    Jeanne Friedmann Westheimer, former assistant dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS), died at Mount Auburn Hospital on Oct. 20. She was 86.

  • Campus & Community

    President holds office hours

    President Lawrence H. Summers will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office from 4 to 5 p.m. on the following dates: Oct. 26 Nov. 29 Dec. 13…

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Saturday, Oct. 20. The official log is located at HUPD headquarters, 29 Garden St.

  • Campus & Community

    In Brief

    CASE accepting applicants

  • Campus & Community

    Notification of suspicious packages encouraged, rumors discouraged

    Despite reports of suspicious packages and materials at Harvard, no materials to date have been received that have been hazardous to the communitys health and safety.

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    Oct. 5, 1740 – Fresh from haranguing 15,000 on Boston Common, the dynamic revivalist George Whitefield breezes in to preach at the Cambridge meetinghouse, inspiring division within families and churches, and much soul-searching among College youth. President Edward Holyoke entertains him, but Whitefield has harsh words for a Harvard in which tutors neglect to pray…

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty Council Notice for Oct. 24

    At its third meeting of the year, the Faculty Council met with deans Susan Pedersen (history and undergraduate education), Jeffrey Wolcowitz (economics and undergraduate education), and Deborah Foster (folklore and mythology and undergraduate education), and with Professor William Fash (anthropology), chair of the facultys Standing Committee on Out-of-Residence Study, to discuss the study abroad program…

  • Campus & Community

    Symphony of Sound

    Symphony of Sound The Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra rehearses for its first concert for the academic year, Saturday, Oct. 27 at 8 p.m., in Sanders Theatre. The evening will begin with the…

  • Campus & Community

    Hau wins MacArthur

    Lene Hau, the woman who stopped light completely, then released it at will, has won a $500,000 MacArthur Fellowship. She and 22 other winners will receive $100,000 a year for the next five years to spend as they wish. No accounting of how the money is spent is required by the giver of the awards,…

  • Campus & Community

    When fieldwork is fieldwork

    Niall Kirkwood’s Scottish accent may be tricky to detect and trickier still to identify, but despite the years he has spent in this country – years that have softened his…

  • Health

    Anthrax toxin receptor discovered

    The first point of contact between anthrax toxin that invades the body and the cells that the toxin will eventually destroy is a protein, known as a “docking” protein or…

  • Campus & Community

    Defining art: TV or not TV?

    What distinguishes Superman from Man and Superman, Rock Around the Clock from Rachmaninoff, Jurassic Park from Mansfield Park?

  • Campus & Community

    Doctors and lawyers and ethics, Oh my!

    An increasingly competitive and deregulated market economy has dramatically changed the medical and legal professions, a panel of five experts agreed last Friday during one of six symposia held to commemorate the inauguration of new Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers.

  • Campus & Community

    Does foreign aid aid? Discuss.

    The rich around the world are getting richer, but the poor arent necessarily getting poorer, as globalization-spurred trade boosts their nations economies, a panel of international development experts said Friday (Oct. 12).