All articles
- 
Campus & Community(Another) new eraFor all the talk about the commercialization and professionalizing of college sports, the one happy constant with athletics in academia is that players willingly perform in the same uniform for four whole seasons. Such loyalty among professional athletes, meanwhile, seems to be going the way of the granny shot. 
- 
Campus & CommunityCommunity Affairs fills fall with free family funAmong the abundance of fun and free offerings for the public in and around Harvard Square this fall are two upcoming events sponsored by Harvard’s Office of Community Affairs. 
- 
HealthStem cells make new heart valvesResearchers have coaxed adult stem cells into forming artificial heart valves that could one day mean fewer surgeries for children suffering from heart defects. 
- 
Campus & Community2007 HAA award recipientsThe Harvard Alumni Association (HAA) Awards were established in 1990 to recognize outstanding service to Harvard University through alumni activities. This year’s awards ceremony will take place during the fall HAA board of directors meeting on Oct. 18. 
- 
Campus & CommunityMathematician Taylor wins Shaw PrizeHerchel Smith Professor of Mathematics Richard Taylor has been awarded the Shaw Prize in Mathematical Sciences for work that unified the diverse fields of prime numbers and symmetry. Taylor shares… 
- 
Campus & CommunityEl-Erian to step down as head of Harvard Management CompanyMohamed A. El-Erian announced today (Sept. 11) that he plans to step down as president and chief executive officer of Harvard Management Company (HMC) at the end of 2007 and to return to his former company, Pacific Investment Management Company (PIMCO), as co-chief executive officer and co-chief investment officer. 
- 
HealthStem cells make new heart valvesHarvard researchers have coaxed adult stem cells into forming artificial heart valves that could one day mean fewer surgeries for children suffering from heart defects. The scientists, at Harvard-affiliated Boston… 
- 
Science & TechBiohybrid of elastic film and muscle cells packs a punchIn an innovative marriage of living cells and a synthetic substrate, bioengineers at Harvard University have found that a rubberlike, elastic film coated with a single layer of cardiac muscle cells can semi-autonomously engage in lifelike gripping, pumping, walking, and swimming. 
- 
Campus & CommunityFirst class of Ruffolo Fellows introduced at Kennedy School ceremonyA ceremony was held Sept. 21 at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG) announcing the establishment of the Giorgio Ruffolo Fellowships in Sustainability Science and introducing the first Ruffolo Fellows to the Harvard community. 
- 
Campus & CommunityLive from the stadium: Saturday night lightsCrimson football fans and Harvard history buffs might be surprised to learn that Saturday’s (Sept. 22) night game wasn’t, strictly speaking, the first time the stadium field was illuminated. In fact, for former Harvard footballers and current Crimson boosters Bob Brooks ’68, Chris Burns ’68, and Matt Donelan ’67, all of whom were in attendance… 
- 
Campus & CommunityTamara Rogers named new vice president for alumni affairs and developmentTamara Elliott Rogers, former director of major gifts in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) and associate director of University Development, and currently associate dean for advancement and planning at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, will become Harvard University’s next vice president for alumni affairs and development, President Drew Faust announced today (Sept.… 
- 
HealthPrimates expect others to act rationallyWhen trying to understand someone’s intentions, nonhuman primates expect others to act rationally by performing the most appropriate action allowed by the environment, according to a new study by researchers… 
- 
HealthFirst robust genetic link to height in humans identifiedOver a century ago, scientists first proposed that height is a complex trait — one influenced by environmental factors and multiple genes. While subsequent studies revealed that most of the… 
- 
Arts & CultureNew research challenges previous knowledge about the origins of urbanizationAncient cities arose not by decree from a centralized political power, as was previously widely believed, but as the outgrowth of decisions made by smaller groups or individuals, according to a new study from researchers at Harvard University, the University of Cambridge, and the University of Edinburgh. 
- 
HealthScientists have something to chew onIn a groundbreaking study, two Harvard scientists have for the first time extracted human DNA from ancient artifacts. The work potentially opens up a new universe of sources for ancient genetic material, which is used to map human migrations in prehistoric times. 
- 
Science & TechCreating a computer currencyComputer scientists are using the latest version of peer-to-peer video sharing software to explore a next-generation electronic commerce model that uses bandwidth as a global currency. 
- 
HealthFirst orchid fossil puts showy blooms at some 80 million years oldBiologists at Harvard University have identified the ancient fossilized remains of a pollen-bearing bee as the first hint of orchids in the fossil record, a find they say suggests orchids are old enough to have coexisted with dinosaurs. 
- 
HealthBrain implants relieve Alzheimer’s damageGenetically engineered cells implanted in mice have cleared away toxic plaques associated with Alzheimer’s disease. 
- 
Campus & CommunityFaust inauguration takes shapeThe inauguration of Drew Faust as Harvard’s 28th president will feature time-honored tradition — ancient artifacts and silver — world music, and talk of tomorrow’s promise. 
- 
Campus & CommunityPolice reportFollowing are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Aug. 20. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor, and is available online at http://www.hupd.harvard.edu/. 
- 
Campus & CommunityNewsmakersProfessor Pilbeam to serve as interim dean of College; Cohen named to Technology Review’s list of top young innovators; Forstein named to residency review committee of ACGME 
- 
Campus & CommunityWacker, former Cabot House co-master, diesAnn MacMillan Wacker, co-master of Cabot House from 1978 to 1984, died May 18. Wacker was married to Warren E.C. Wacker, Henry K. Oliver Professor of Hygiene Emeritus and, from 1971 to 1989, the director of University Health Services. 
- 
Campus & CommunityCenter on the Developing Child awards Julius B. Richmond FellowshipLaunched in August 2006 with a mission to create a new generation of leaders who possess a broad perspective on the promotion of healthy child development, the Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University recently announced the recipients of its first Julius B. Richmond Fellowship. 
- 
Campus & CommunityHUCTW Childcare Fellowship application now availableMembers of the Harvard Union of Clerical and Technical Workers (HUCTW) bargaining unit who have child-care costs during working hours (between January and December 2008) are eligible to apply for an HUCTW Childcare Fellowship. 
- 
Campus & CommunityWagers named ‘Distinguished Young Scholar in Medical Research’Assistant Professor of Pathology Amy Wagers of the Harvard-affiliated Joslin Diabetes Center has been named to the W.M. Keck Foundation’s 2007 class of Distinguished Young Scholars in Medical Research. 
- 
Campus & CommunityLee and Deborah Gehrke appointed Quincy House co-mastersLee and Deborah Gehrke, who served as acting House co-masters of Quincy House during the 2006-07 academic year, have been appointed Quincy House co-masters. 
- 
Campus & Community‘Stuff Sale’ for good cause to take over Science Center lawnHarvard Habitat for Humanity’s upcoming multiday “Stuff Sale” will feature more than $80,000 of used furniture, electronics, appliances, storage containers, games, sports equipment, mirrors, vases, clothes, and more. 
- 
Campus & CommunityInaugural Day of Service set for Sept. 29The Harvard Undergraduate Council, the Harvard Graduate Council, and the Phillip Brooks House Association have partnered to coordinate the first University-wide Day of Service on Sept. 29. 
- 
Campus & CommunityHockey lands new assistant coach in FoleyHarvard has named Patrick Foley, a former USA Hockey assistant coach and three-year captain at the University of New Hampshire, an assistant coach of men’s ice hockey, Robert D. Ziff Head Coach of men’s ice hockey Ted Donato recently announced. 
- 
Campus & CommunityVeteran mentor Sowa named assistant coach of men’s swimmingHarvard men’s swimming head coach Tim Murphy recently announced that Mark Sowa — a veteran of collegiate and international coaching — has been named an assistant coach with the Crimson program. 
 
							 
							